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Turbocharger Testing Turbochargers are one of many products manufactured in the war against pollution. Automotive manufacturers, government agencies, and environmental organizations concerned with pollution from automobile and truck exhaust rely on turbochargers to reduce harmful emissions by increasing air intake to a vehicles engine. To verify that vehicles equipped with turbochargers meet these requirements, on- and off-road testing is required. Application Summary The engineers test their supercharger in a two-part investigation. First it is tested on a laboratory dynamometer, where the supercharger is installed into a typical vehicle and measured for current, engine rpm, manifold pressure, motor speed, horsepower, and torque. Later, the vehicle is removed from the lab and taken on a road test where the same parameters are measured under normal driving conditions. Engineers directly compare the supercharged vehicles performance results to the same vehicle operating with the supercharger turned off. The researchers needed a PC-based data acquisition system to monitor, record, and analyze their superchargers performance. To be effective, the data acquisition system has to be mobile, powered by the vehicle battery, and withstand the vibration associated with road testing. IOtechs Solution The manufacturer was impressed with the data acquisition systems capability to store large data files generated by their research. The LogBook/300 uses removable PC-Card memory (PCMCIA), allowing researchers to use a 20-Mbyte memory storage PC-Card. More importantly, the manufacturer liked the systems signal conditioning options and included LogView Out-of-the-Box graphical data acquisition software, which gave them the ability to view real-time data with no programming required. The engineers also appreciated the LogBook/300s compact size (11 x 8.5 x 1.75), the same form factor as a notebook PC, which allowed the system to fit easily under the front seat of the test vehicle. The researchers measured current, engine rpm, manifold pressure, motor speed, horsepower, and torque by way of sensors installed on the engine and wired to the data acquisition system located inside the vehicle. All connections were zip tied and secured with epoxy to avoid contact with moving parts. Several signal conditioning options expanded the capability of the LogBook/300 system: IOtechs DBK7 frequency input card provided 4 channels of frequency measurement capability; the DBK83 thermocouple input card provided 14 channels of highly accurate thermocouple measurements plus automatic cold-junction compensation; the DBK11A provided researchers with convenient screw terminals for signal connection; and the DBK34A provided backup power to the LogBook/300 system in case the vehicle’s battery voltage dropped. After each test was completed, engineers removed the PC-Card from the LogBook/300, inserted it into a laptop computer, and reviewed the data with included PostView software, a post-acquisition viewing package included with LogView software. Using PostView, the engineers were able to display and scroll data from files that were too large to evaluate using Microsoft Excel. Conclusion |