Airbox
An airbox is an empty chamber on the inlet of most combustion engines. It collects air from outside and feeds it to the intake hoses of each cylinder.
Older engines drew air directly from the surroundings into each individual carburetor. Modern engines instead draw air into an airbox, which is connected by individual hoses to each carburetor or directly to the intake ports in fuel-injected engines, thus avoiding an extra intake manifold.[1]
The airbox firstly allows the use of just one air filter instead of many. Since attention to environment effects of motorbikes rose by the end of the 1970ies, it could now collect pump gases from the crankcase and the tank air vent and re-feed them to the engine.
Performance
Since the 1990s, engine designers also sought to exploit the properties of oscillating gas to improve performance.
Many high-performance motorcycles have the airbox fed through a funnel from the front of the bike, where a higher pressure moves more air in the intake and thus improves power. Examples for this 'ram-air' construction are the "srad"-models of the Suzuki GSX-R750 where "srad" stands for "suzuki ram air direct", the Kawasaki Ninja ZX-6R or the BMW S1000RR.
Secondly, designers exploit a property of air cavities known as Helmholtz resonance. Flow through the airbox is optimal at its resonance frequency, which depends on airbox volume and the inlet area and length of the snorkel. The resonance is typically chosen to be at a medium speed where torque otherwise drops, caused by valve timing overlap.[2]
References
- ↑ Greg Banish: Engine Management: Advance Tuning; Cartech Inc; ISBN 1932494421
- ↑ Resonant airboxes: Theory and Applications, Mark Lawrence, requested February 5, 2016