i recently read an article that explained how intercoolers on FI cars worked, along with their development of water spray cooling - went roughly as follows:
basically intercoolers (air/air) do not act like a radiator in that it is not the air flowing through them that keeps them cool.
what happens is that the intercooler is more like a heatsink, absorbing the heat of the air under boost and disipating it whilst not under boost. therefore, if you're driving steady and not boosting a lot (say 10% of your time on boost which is maybe even high for in town) and you boot it, inlet manifold temps won't really budge as the intercooler is still cool and will absorb a load of the heat from the air. but then if you're driving really hard like on track where you're boosting say 60% of the time, then the core temp is going to rise, increasing the inlet manifold air temp.
therefore if you want water injection on to your intercooler, it should occur *before* the boost event so that it's as cool as possible for the hot air to hit it and take the most heat out out of it. spraying water just based on throttle position was pointless as most of the time the core temp wouldn't be high enough. it would also stop spraying on trailing throttle and gear changes which you might not want if driving hard. and spraying based on inlet air temp would keep spraying if you were in traffic and just got heat soak in the engine which would be wasteful of the water.
is that about right? i'll see if i can find the link...
basically intercoolers (air/air) do not act like a radiator in that it is not the air flowing through them that keeps them cool.
what happens is that the intercooler is more like a heatsink, absorbing the heat of the air under boost and disipating it whilst not under boost. therefore, if you're driving steady and not boosting a lot (say 10% of your time on boost which is maybe even high for in town) and you boot it, inlet manifold temps won't really budge as the intercooler is still cool and will absorb a load of the heat from the air. but then if you're driving really hard like on track where you're boosting say 60% of the time, then the core temp is going to rise, increasing the inlet manifold air temp.
therefore if you want water injection on to your intercooler, it should occur *before* the boost event so that it's as cool as possible for the hot air to hit it and take the most heat out out of it. spraying water just based on throttle position was pointless as most of the time the core temp wouldn't be high enough. it would also stop spraying on trailing throttle and gear changes which you might not want if driving hard. and spraying based on inlet air temp would keep spraying if you were in traffic and just got heat soak in the engine which would be wasteful of the water.
is that about right? i'll see if i can find the link...