Originally Posted By: Black Bart
If you are cruising at 60 mph you will have the throttle open a small amount and pumping lose will be high.
The throttle controls the pumping lose not the filter.
If the filter restricts the air and you open the throttle more then the filter becomes the pumping lose.
I think I may be starting to sound like a broken record so I'll try to confine myself to this final clarification.
You're right that the throttle is the major pumping loss at any normal throttle setting. It's not the only pumping loss, though. Pumping losses occur throughout the system, both intake and exhaust, and in the case of an air filter there will be a pressure drop regardless of whether the filter is clean or dirty. This pressure drop will increase as the filter gets dirty, very slowly at first, then more quickly.
Because there is a pressure drop prior to the throttle, the throttle is controlling flow from an already-less-than-atmospheric-pressure environment. Yes, you open it slightly more to compensate if the filter is too dirty, and the injection feedback system adjusts to put in the right amount of fuel, but there is still a loss of efficiency. You can look at it as two pressure drops in series to simplify it, but the truth is that every time a molecule of intake air encounters a resistance of any kind, it removes energy from the intake flow which must necessarily come from the engine's output power.
If you are cruising at 60 mph you will have the throttle open a small amount and pumping lose will be high.
The throttle controls the pumping lose not the filter.
If the filter restricts the air and you open the throttle more then the filter becomes the pumping lose.
I think I may be starting to sound like a broken record so I'll try to confine myself to this final clarification.
You're right that the throttle is the major pumping loss at any normal throttle setting. It's not the only pumping loss, though. Pumping losses occur throughout the system, both intake and exhaust, and in the case of an air filter there will be a pressure drop regardless of whether the filter is clean or dirty. This pressure drop will increase as the filter gets dirty, very slowly at first, then more quickly.
Because there is a pressure drop prior to the throttle, the throttle is controlling flow from an already-less-than-atmospheric-pressure environment. Yes, you open it slightly more to compensate if the filter is too dirty, and the injection feedback system adjusts to put in the right amount of fuel, but there is still a loss of efficiency. You can look at it as two pressure drops in series to simplify it, but the truth is that every time a molecule of intake air encounters a resistance of any kind, it removes energy from the intake flow which must necessarily come from the engine's output power.