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Y-Block Personalities

Posted By John Mummert 16 Years Ago
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John Mummert
Posted 16 Years Ago
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The information that came forth regrading Barney Navarro got me thinking that it might be interesting to start a thread or section about well known and not so well known people that were early proponents of the Y-Block. Articles by them and about them might be of interest and educational, even inspiring in some cases.

Some obvious people would be: Karol Miller, Doan Spencer, Racer Brown, Barney Navarro, Bill Stroppe, John Holman.

In studying the design of the Y-Block you will see the name Ricardo mentioned but how many know who he was and what he did?

Although not necessarily involved with the Y, people such as Ed Winfield need to be remembered or future generations will miss out a great deal on the contributions of some truly talented individuals.

http://ford-y-block.com 

20 miles east of San Diego, 20 miles north of Mexico

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aussiebill
Posted 16 Years Ago
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John, that would be great and interesting also and maybe some new achievements may come to light. I will get some details of a great gentleman that i considered a mentor to all and myself with anything to do with early fords and y blocks here in austraiia. There arnt too many days i dont think of him. regards bill.

  AussieBill            YYYY    Forever Y Block     YYYY

 Down Under, Australia

Hollow Head
Posted 16 Years Ago
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Sir Harry Ricardo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Ricardo

http://www.oldengine.org/members/diesel/misc/ricardo.htm

http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/uploads/images/e3fd9a79-e7c3-47ff-a648-8cd5.jpg Seppo from Järvenpää, Finland
www.hollowheads.net (just click the hole in the head to proceed)

Glen Henderson
Posted 16 Years Ago
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Great idea John, I've read the Carol Miller stuff several times and really enjoy it. I would love to learn more about all the guys that promoted the Y block. It would be a great chapter in your book when you finish it.

Glen Henderson



Freedom is not Free

Letohatchee, AL
mctim64
Posted 16 Years Ago
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Hollow Head (11/17/2009)
Sir Harry Ricardo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Ricardo

 

WOW!  Very interesting read.

http://forums.y-blocksforever.com/uploads/images/b1f2e0d6-2566-46b3-b81d-3ff3.jpg   God Bless. Smile  Tim                           http://yblockguy.com/

350ci Y-Block FED "Elwood", 301ci Y-Block Unibody LSR "Jake", 312ci Y-Block '58 F-100, 338ci Y-Block powered Model A Tudor

tim@yblockguy.com  Visalia, California    Just west of the Sequoias


Don Woodruff
Posted 16 Years Ago
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Verne Schuman of Bluegrass Ia. Ran "F" codes sucessfully, came up with many innovations. May have run earlier "Y"s.

DonW

John Mummert
Posted 16 Years Ago
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Thank you for the link to the Ricardo bio. I have one of his books, "The High Speed Internal Combustion Engine" first published in the 1920's. My copy is from the 1940's although it was published into the 60's. It is an amazing piece of work with pictures of actual combustion taking place viewed through an izing glass window. He tried various sparkplug locations until he found the location that allowed the highest compression ratio without detonation. This was termed H.U.C.R. for highest usable compression ratio. 

He experimented with deck height and found that too much was detrimental back in the 1920's! There are graphs that show the relationship of deck height vs HUCR. As deck ht. increased, HUCR went down.

He understood that turbulence could help keep the air and fuel homogenous something that is lost on engine designers to this day. If the air and fuel go their separate ways an engine won't make the power it should from the amount of fuel consumed, even if air fuel ratio is correct.

Although his testing was done on flathead engines operating at 1500rpm on 76 octane fuel (highest available at the time) his findings are in many ways still relevant.

The best thing about his writing is that it can be understood by a lay person. There are no half page equations, just simple explanations of his findings and graphs that make sense.

http://ford-y-block.com 

20 miles east of San Diego, 20 miles north of Mexico

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charliemccraney
Posted 16 Years Ago
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John Mummert (11/18/2009)


The best thing about his writing is that it can be understood by a lay person. There are no half page equations, just simple explanations of his findings and graphs that make sense.




I hate it when I want to learn about a concept but all I find is books with equations and words I've never heard and don't need to learn. I'm going to see if I can find a copy.


Lawrenceville, GA
Teros292
Posted 16 Years Ago
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The book can be downloaded from following address.

http://rapidshare.com/files/284682839/The_High-Speed_Internal_Combustion_Engine_-_Harry_R._Ricardo.rar from year 1931.

Or you can order it from Ricardors own store. http://estore.ricardo.com/product.asp?P_ID=149 Reprint from year 1968.


Tero from Nurmijarvi, Finland
56 Country Sedan, 61 F-100, 61 F-600, 55 F-620, 52 Mercury

John Mummert
Posted 16 Years Ago
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I didn't realize the book was available new. They were selling on ebay for 75-$100 and I was lucky to find one for 55 or so.

The only translation I needed was the term: "and c" which is at the end of many sentences. Finally figured out it meant "etcetera"

http://ford-y-block.com 

20 miles east of San Diego, 20 miles north of Mexico

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