Ball Burnished Cases

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Uh oh....Does that mean we need a NACA profile on our cylinder heads? :shock: :mrgreen:

If that's the case, then what effect will a liberal coating of PJ1 have on barrels and head?
 
Luckily for us, I don't think the Commando motor is teetering on the knife edge of disaster as far as the ability to shed heat goes. The production of heat is directly related to horsepower and most of the time we are riding around on 20-25hp. That raging 45hp at our disposal is 7000rpm at WOT.

I like the effect of burnishing for cosmetic reasons and corrosion resistance. The parts probably will be easier to keep clean and a little tougher against the rot from abrasion and moisture that I see on the forward facing surfaces on all the aluminum parts on my bike. I think that the high luster on the parts now will be tempered after 3-4 washings but it may still be tougher than rough castings.
 
The issue with Nortons is not the fin surface area which it has plenty to sit still on low power and not over heat in summer time, but more how much a mirror smooth finish there is to act as reverse mirror to reflect IR photons back inside instead of out to the breeze. Because Norton has excess fin area for its intended fueling heat ya can get away with a mostly mirror engine, until ya hop it up and really burn some fuel through it. Harley vendors sell a diamond pattern shiny saw tooth cut for fin edges which they claim increases heat dump but mainly its for looks and a mean process to handle w/o skin cuts or marring the show off sparkle texture.

PJI or even powder coat is a non heat issue in regular set up and run Commandos.
Pump em up for race power and use it - then may run into heat pile up issues on a long run at WOT if too polished.
 
Apparently I go with Hobot this time.


The reason this ball-burnished engine would run hotter has nothing to do with airflow or surface area, it is simply because a polished and/or light colored surface is much worse at getting rid of heat than a non-polished and/or dark colored surface.

The bare casting that will radiate heat the best will be one with the castings in original condition, not polished, burnished etc..

Getting a dark color on the casting can help, but it can be overdone. A dark anodizing on alloy or very thin coat of stove-black on an iron cylinder will do the job. Powder coating your entire engine is like wrapping it in insulation.....
 
slimslowslider said:
As far as optimising heat transfer, I reckon you do not want any boundary layer at all, you want turbulent flow at the least.

If you can explain to me how there might be turbulent flow without a boundary layer I might understand this remark...


Tim
 
Tim, I took it you refered to laminar flow, if you meant turbulent, fair enough.
Turbulent it will be, when riding and where air has good access.
 
I remember one time I had a radio with lots of tubes (valves for you UK fellas) in it, and there were metal shields over the tubes, so sort of shiny. I painted the tube shields black and I couldn't believe how much cooler the tubes were, you could touch them with the flat black paint on the shields. Without they were so hot you couldn't handle them. Color does make a big difference in radiating heat, but on the Norton, it's probably not such a big issue since most of the time you're going down the road and there is plenty of air circulating. I would doubt if you could make the barrels or head so shiny that the heat doesn't get dissipated. It's probably the same argument about powder coating the engine parts.

Not that I would do that.

Dave
69S
 
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