Smokey Yunick's Hot Vapor Engine

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  • 318isbmw
    replied
    Originally posted by LJ851
    HAHA! Do some reading bro, Smokey was the real thing. GM doesn't knock on your door to validate new engine concepts if you are an ass hat.
    +1, he also had comp cams design aftermarket parts for it as well. Hot Rod magazine and several others had articles in the mid 1980's about this setup. The oil companies stepped in, that's the reason it never became a reality, they forced him out.

    He worked for more than just GM, he also spent time at Ford and Chrysler doing consulting work. He wrote about it in a book as well, its called "Best Damn Garage in Town" but I think its out of print. He never edited it so its tough to read, but really funny. It also talks about how the hot vapor engine was a design he came up with in the 1960's and it took him 20 years to refine.

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  • LJ851
    replied
    Originally posted by NitroRustlerDriver
    I'm skeptical of any major break through by a guy in his garage. Especially when it involves a Fiero.
    HAHA! Do some reading bro, Smokey was the real thing. GM doesn't knock on your door to validate new engine concepts if you are an ass hat.

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  • Farbin Kaiber
    replied
    Originally posted by NitroRustlerDriver
    I'm skeptical of any major break through by a guy in his garage. Especially when it involves a Fiero.

    You must not know who he is. This is the guy that successfully bent EVERY rule in the heyday of NASCAR.

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  • merrrr
    replied
    Originally posted by NitroRustlerDriver
    I'm skeptical of any major break through by a guy in his garage. Especially when it involves a Fiero.
    lmao

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  • Sagaris
    replied
    I have read about his "legends" and ideas about building an "adiabatic" engine. I don't think that any of his claims or secrets have been successfully implemented in real life.

    The reason cars have cooling systems is because the engine materials cannot handle combustion temperatures reliably on their own. If materials were available/economically feasible to make production cars that could run with no cooling system and trap as much heat as possible into the combustion chamber, there would be a larger pressure change during combustion and subsequently, more power. The theory of running an engine hot and trapping as much heat as possible inside the combustion chamber to make more power is a solid theory, the materials to do so just don't exist.

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  • AndrewBird
    replied
    I'm skeptical of any major break through by a guy in his garage. Especially when it involves a Fiero.

    Leave a comment:


  • M-technik-3
    replied
    Vaguely remember that back when this came out but it died off as Fuel got cheap in 87.

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  • Kershaw
    started a topic Smokey Yunick's Hot Vapor Engine

    Smokey Yunick's Hot Vapor Engine



    high horsepower and high mpg. too good to be true?

    discuss.
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