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04-04-2014, 06:40 PM | #1 | ||||||
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I was cleaning up my new shed and organising packing case after packing case of old car and motorbike magazines, and I came across a Wheels magazine, from November 1984.
I thought it might be interesting to have a bit of a look at the car industry as it was back then. What drew me to this particular issue was that it had a pair of Falcons on the front...XF Falcons. It was headlined with "Super Falcon! Driving Fords XF. Much, much more than just a facelift!" First up, in the editorial "Wheels Within", by Peter Robinson, he writes about how people could easily be turned off Australian built cars by small things like manufacturing mistakes and faults, and how they would then turn to foreign cars. It specifically mentions his brothers experience with the Camira, a car which had easily won Car Of The Year in 1982. He had always bought Australian cars, until the Camira soured it for him. It lists the problems he had with it right from new, and the column ends with the following, almost psychic, paragraph about Australian cars and what happens when makers get complacent and think people will just naturally "buy Australian" no matter what... Quote:
Then, in the "News" section, there was another story that resonated with stuff talked about on this forum frequently... Quote:
There was also a section on another development that was supposedly "only a year or so away and which would revolutionise" things. Electric turbochargers. It was an experimental thing being done by Mitsubishi, and showed a lot of promise. Amazing that we still don't see anything much of this today except "development work". There was an amazing news story about a revolutionary thing released by Renault in Australia... Quote:
Also, something surprising. CVT transmissions are around...but still have problems and issues for users and manufacturers. Quote:
The big story in the issue was a full test of the XF Falcon...and what a great looking car it still is even looking back thirty years...in my mind especially both the yellow and the red S-Packs they have on the cover. I love looking back in time with these old mags. |
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04-04-2014, 09:10 PM | #2 | ||
Whoa, this is heavy!
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Old car magazines are fantastic, I have managed to collect most wheels magazines from 1988ish onwards (plus assorted older ones), and a decent collection of Motor (or modern motor back then) and CAR Australia (remember them?), was only just recently flicking through the 88 COTY wheels (VN Commodore) and the nostalgia is fantastic. Anyone remember the 10, 000km megatest of the EA and VN? Or how everyone gushed over the locally produced TM Magna, and almost every issue had something about the upcoming Ford Capri.
Makes for depressing reading sometimes though, how things have gone so horribly wrong now.
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05-04-2014, 10:01 AM | #3 | ||
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05-04-2014, 11:50 AM | #4 | ||
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I remember seeing water injection adverts into the eighties...Street Machine even did an article on it I believe and tested the benefits or otherwise. I'll have to see if I can dig that issue out when I get to the huge box of Street MAchine mags.
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05-04-2014, 12:00 PM | #5 | |||
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Never noticed any gains in power or economy as this was the reason they advertised in those days. Last edited by Itsme; 05-04-2014 at 12:16 PM. |
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05-04-2014, 12:59 PM | #6 | |||
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05-04-2014, 01:11 PM | #7 | ||
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Fairly sure back in the 2nd world war the Germans used water injection in some of their planes.
Can't remember the reasoning. Better fuel economy/distance ? Standard petrol was about 30c / lt in the early 80's |
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05-04-2014, 01:19 PM | #8 | |||
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Petrol...yes, when I started driving in 1982, petrol was about 35 cents a liter. I had my Charger with the heavily worked 265 Hemi in it, and was chucking over $50 a week in fuel down it's throat driving to a farm outside town to work, drag racing on friday and saturday nights, taking out girls, etc... |
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05-04-2014, 01:24 PM | #9 | ||
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Water injection was used to increase power in fighters engines kept temperatures down and allowed for a few more RPM's and a little bit more power...fuel was conserved as the engines ran leaner...to an extent...
Used in jets too... Then there was methanol...
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05-04-2014, 03:32 PM | #10 | ||
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I've seen video of civilian airliners like the early DC10's and Boeing 707's taking off leaving streams of black smoke like that...something to do with the different formulation of aviation fuel back then.
I vividly remember the Bundaberg Air Show when "Connie" the restored Super Constellation air liner visited. They did a few take offs and fly pasts, and the announcer said that when the plane was new, aviation fuel was something like over 140 octane, and in a full throttle take off it would billow three foot flames out the exhausts of the magnificent great radial engines, but now that aviation fuel was "only" 100 octane, it now only showed a few short spits of flames at full throttle. They did a take off at dusk when you could see it better, and yes, there were still flames spitting out the exhausts of the engines, but it would have been something to see in the old days... Of course they still used old style oiling systems, and it was pretty spectacular when they first fired it up...and I thought my old Kawasaki 750 two stroke triple created some smoke... Back on cars, some of the old adverts were a giggle...Certainly can't be accused of false advertising...it's quite correct... Oh, and onto "the opposition"...next time someone tells you that the Torana "XU2" was going to be a little LJ XU1 with a V8 in it, well, now you know better...it was nothing but a briefly considered code name for the V8 version of the next Torana which was designed to have a 4, 6, or V8 in it. By the "blocks" underneath, it would appear to be a pre-production clay model. You still see them now with some clay models of new cars. Last edited by 2011G6E; 05-04-2014 at 03:38 PM. |
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05-04-2014, 06:35 PM | #11 | ||
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The black smoke is due to injection of water...something to do with the water extinguishing the flame quicker and exsess fuel burning.
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05-04-2014, 10:06 PM | #12 | ||
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05-04-2014, 11:09 PM | #13 | ||
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Slightly off topic but to address a couple of posts above...
The picture of Connie belching smoke during start up is more to do with the physical design of radial engines rather than any "special" or "old design" oiling system. That is the lower cylinders (the ones at the bottom of the "corn cob" will collect oil in them after shut down as the engine cools. Then, before starting the engines if they have been sitting for anything longer than an hour or so, it is recommended to manually turn the prop through at least 9 blades (3 revolutions of the engine) to allow the oil collected in the lower couple of cylinders to escape past the valves back out into either manifold. What this does is stop a hydraulic lock from occurring and the engine breaking a conrod (or even worse) during start. It looks spectactular, is usually accompanied by a lot of smoke and noise and a grumpy idle until the plugs clear, but is entirely normal of radial aircraft engines. The exhaust stack flames are common as piston engined aircraft usually run very short, open exhausts (they don't run mufflers - but the main noise you actually hear in "noisy prop aircraft are the prop tips nearing the speed of sound), or augmenters (pipes with holes in the sides). A Connie has what are known as two stage superchargers fitted (HI/LO boost), with HI boost being reserved for high altitude operation only as it would supply too much boost down low and the engine would grenade, which they used to do quite regularly back when Connies and DC3s and 4s etc ruled the skies. As mentioned we don't have the old octane rated fuels available anymore so the engines don't quite go like they used to in days gone by. Piston aircraft engines only ever rev to a few thousand RPM (governed by prop tip speed or if a reduction gearbox is fitted), but have to deliver their maximum power and torque at this low RPM so the designed cylinder pressures can be very very high to achieve this. The black smoke you see pouring out of the B52s and out of the old JT6 jetpipes are synonymous of the technology of the time. There were no such thing as high bypass turbofans available back when those aircraft were manufactured. These days with the constant push for faster, quieter, further on ever decreasing amounts of fuel jet transport engines have evolved a long way from the straight through (known as pure) jet engines of the 50s and 60's. If you take a look at what the difference I am referring to (and I am grossly over simplifying it) you'll see that while a modern jet engine is still a jet engine, they now use a much smaller jet engine in the centre behind a larger (ducted) fan assembly to impart a greater mass flow to the surrounding air using a lot less fuel and most of the jet characteristic "crackle" of the old pure jets is confined and muffled within the rearward flow of air/exhaust. So they don't sound the same now, nor do they belch smoke like they used to. Not too sure about just water injection (have seen it on a turbo'd alloy headed XD sedan back in the late 80's) but an aircraft type I once operated (turboprop Metroliners) uses a water/meth solution housed in a tank in either the nose or the belly (dependant upon variant) of the aircraft. The way it works is quite simple. When it was required during a take-off roll (say we had a heavy load to lift out of a hot/high density alt strip) we would arm the system at the correct time and it would spray a metered dose of the mixture into the intake of each engine, cooling and making the intake charge much more dense, which allows the engine to develop more power (to a point). You certainly knew it when the 50 odd lts of water meth ran out after take-off on a hot day. Didn't want to take it too far off topic, hope that cleared a couple of things up. Taily. |
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06-04-2014, 07:02 AM | #15 | ||||
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Quote:
Quote:
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06-04-2014, 07:45 AM | #16 | |||
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More black smoke maybe when using the system, but the fact that many civilian jet liners of the age that did use the systems when the airframes were brand new, but a few years into their lives the development of pure jets had made the water/meth systems redundant as the fleets were brought up to the later spec powerplants. The B707/KC135, the DC8, fact is any jet airliner of the time could leave a pall of smoke that would envelop an airport or a small town in thick choking black smoke if the wind was light enough even after the systems were retired in airliners. That was just where engine development was back then, thick black smoke was part of the deal. Just because you read a story in a blog does not make what is written entirely correct. He is right with what he attributes to very thick black smoke, but the fact that the smoke was there at all was not solely due to the water/meth as you imply. I can understand the way that piece was written where you would get that idea from though. Hope that helps... Taily. |
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06-04-2014, 07:50 AM | #17 | ||
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06-04-2014, 07:56 AM | #18 | ||
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Ah , the Camira, Wheels car of the year. I'd have a safe bet that a lot on money changed hands from Fisherman's Bend to the office of "Wheels" to get that result..............
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06-04-2014, 09:09 AM | #19 | |||
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If it hadn't been for the abysmal and lazy build quality, as well as problems with the first engines, they would have dominated the mid-sized section of the market, but instead they sadly gained a quick reputation for faults and shoddy quality. Sad really...the Australian motor industry had come up with a true world class car (again I say "apparently") that exposed people to the idea that you didn't need a big six cylinder sedan to have a decent family car...but it shot itself in the foot. |
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06-04-2014, 09:09 AM | #20 | ||
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It was a decent car when new, and can you name a car released here in 1982 that was better?
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06-04-2014, 09:20 AM | #21 | ||
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06-04-2014, 09:49 AM | #22 | |||
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With all storming 149kw.
But, that was the era and we can'tbe too harsh...there's another thread on here about old car magazines, and I made a comment about the details in a magazine someone was asking about...it was the December '82 Wheels magazine with the big test of an XE ESP Ghia and a VH Commodore Brock Group Three SS. Quote:
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06-04-2014, 11:17 AM | #23 | ||
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i had that mag, XE v Brock. they gave the trophy to the Brock, but in my eyes the Brock wasn't a factory car, it was aftermarket. so apples and oranges.
to say a current corolla outshines the ol' ESP is stupid. different era, different applications. the XE ESP was a very fine road car built for fast, efficient highway driving for a family and their luggage. yeah you're right 149kw, tuned down to appease the insurance agencies and pathetic green wishes of the time. totally dead 2 years later because of mandatory fuel changes. times haven't changed at all...... |
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06-04-2014, 11:44 AM | #24 | ||
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Speaking of power...looking at the same 1984 issue of Wheels, the following figures are interesting:
* Ford 4.1x-flow - 98kw * Ford 5.8 (only in the Bronco) - a real powerhouse at 162kw (compared to previous years 351's like the 149kw in the XE ESP). * Ford Laser - 54kw * Holden 3.3 - 86kw * Holden 5.0 - 126kw * Holden Gemini - 60kw * Camira - 64kw * Toyota Corolla - 54kw The highest output available in Australia as a production car was, of course, the Lamborghini Countach S at 276kw. The Porsche 911 carrera Turbo and the 928 both made 221kw. Close behind was the magnificent V12 Jaguar XJ-HE with 197.7kw. The lowest were the tiny little vans/wagons you used to see, the last new cars that still had crossply tyres actually...the Diahatsu HandiVan with 22kw, and the little Suzuki Hatch with a miserable 19kw... |
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06-04-2014, 12:51 PM | #25 | |||
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It's still used to this day. |
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06-04-2014, 06:13 PM | #26 | ||
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^ Water/methanol injection is real big in the USA in the performance diesel groups.
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06-04-2014, 06:31 PM | #27 | |||
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I love the looks, even the way they drive, but unless your willing to do a 4.0l swap, or heavily mod the cross flow then your easy picking at the traffic light Grand Prix. |
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07-04-2014, 01:38 AM | #28 | ||
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07-04-2014, 02:40 AM | #29 | |||
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It's also something younger drivers and car enthusiasts don't understand most likely...they'll see someone who started driving in the seventies or eighties take a new four cylinder cars for a drive, maybe not even a particularly sporty model like a Focus ST but something like a Corolla or Subaru Impreza, and the young guys will wonder why we seem so surprised and comment on how well it goes. Well you would too if you grew up in an era when V8's made piddling (by todays standards) horsepower unless you spent up big on modifications, an era when six cylinders were just "OK", and when we used to see four cylinders as something for granny, apart from the few oddballs who spent the time and effort on, for example, a 2 liter in an Escort or Cortina. When you drive a new car, you of course mentally compare it to every other car you've owned, and it can surprise you. For instance, back in 1982 my well worked 265 hemi Charger was a lumpy fuel guzzling rocketship of a car capable of easily walking away from most V8's in town, and it was dynoed and calculated to put out 270hp at the flywheel...but that was the result of a lot of engine work and a 500 Holley, with fuel "economy" at rediculous levels. Then in early 2011 we bought a brand new G6E Falcon, and I was constantly amazed at how the engine in it put out practically the same horsepower as my Charger, but was smooth running and used less fuel than my 1982 2 liter Celica does. I'll hit fifty next year, so I think I am allowed to say "Some of you young whipper snappers don't know how good you got it...get out and try and drive some old cars...standard unmodified ones if you can...and you'll see what we mean." |
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07-04-2014, 12:32 PM | #30 | |||
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http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/d...n/viewall.html http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/1...nol_injection/ http://www.dieselpowermag.com/tech/1...h_is_too_much/ |
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