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Water brake valve

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(@pumpngo)
Posts: 36
Member
Topic starter
 

I'm making my water brake valve now and would really appreciate dimensions of the water brake valve you put pictures up of .

What hp was that valve designed for ?

http://yourdyno.com/brakeabsorber-dynos/

Just comparing hand sizes looks to be about 25mm by 25mm overall, say 25mm by 10mm with the taper on the end . I'm told to get full flow from my pumps 

I need a 1.5" hole size in the valve.

From factory my waterbrakes have two separate 1" inlets. The pump guy recommended two ,  3hp ,  1" in out  , 60 psi pumps . He said they will have full flow together through a 1.5" valve.

The water brakes were (as a pair )1100 hp semi trailer dyno factory rating , for constant use . I figure, or hope they are capable of more than the 550hp and was told to get max hp from them i need really good water supply.

Am I over killing it ?

My plan is to make the same shape hole as yours , but have the big end the area of the 1.5" hole. Does this sound reasonable ?

 

 
Posted : 25/05/2018 5:04 am
(@admin)
Posts: 1457
Member Admin
 

Hi, we have a 1 inch valve from Land and Sea, standard flow, and use the largest dual rotor water brake also from Land and Sea. It looks a bit small, but Land and Sea were clear that it is big enough. It works ok.

 
Posted : 27/05/2018 12:06 am
(@pumpngo)
Posts: 36
Member
Topic starter
 

Thanks

 

 
Posted : 27/05/2018 3:26 pm
(@mach_1)
Posts: 350
Member
 

Tech Talk Animation on How Water Brakes Work

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSNkB0BXnHM

 

Is you valve connect to the inlet or outlet  or both ?

 
Posted : 28/05/2018 5:03 am
(@pumpngo)
Posts: 36
Member
Topic starter
 

It will be connected to inlet. Outlet has a valve but as I understand. If i have enough water volume going in, it will be wide open so the heat stays down. Unless i can't hold the hp with it wide open , then It will have to be adjusted. This information is not real world experience , just book learning .

Also my brakes have another two inlets , I'm considering plumbing them in too.

There is a lot of general water brake information, but once your looking for specific stuff like the valve it gets harder. This has turned into a bigger job than i first thought . I mean i watched guys on youtube with a waterbrake mounted straight to an engine and fed by a garden hose. I suppose for one off pulls thats ok. Although I might be complicating things too much too.

 
Posted : 28/05/2018 6:12 am
(@admin)
Posts: 1457
Member Admin
 

Yes, this is the typical connection. You control the inlet valve, and then you use a static outlet valve that you may need to adjust a bit depending on the engine. You want a good enough flow so that the system reacts fast, but you need to keep enough water in the brake so it can actually brake enough to hold the engine.

 
Posted : 29/05/2018 7:36 pm
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