Water in piston
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Water in piston
Collapse
X
-
Thought it was a mineral?
"These sodium filled valves follow the same cooling principal as a human's ability to sweat. The solid sodium in the valve has a very low melting point (97.72C) and high boiling point (883C). This means the liquid sodium that condenses at the bottom of the valve near the combustion chamber boils off to the top of the valve when properly heated. This process of evaporation dissipates heat from the combustion process cooling the engine.
"The sodium at the top of the valve eventually condenses back into a liquid forming a sort of rain cycle right in the valve of your own engine."
https://drivetribe.com/p/what-the-he...TRaALDQ_GUAgSA
Either way, water in the piston sounds bad. Even if it's only water in the cyliinder.Last edited by oldmako69; 03-24-2021, 11:56 AM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by boscoe99 View Post
When I’ve seen pure sodium it looked yellow and not metallic at all. This and it’s reactive ness (put it in water and watch) makes many people believe it is not a metal. To be a meta it has to have other characteristics like malleability and ductility, but I don’t know how you would test that easily. Potassium is also similar and a metal.
Comment
-
Comment