New coating for engine internals?
Self lubricating and almost as hard as diamond? cha ching!
The "ceramic alloy" is created by combining a metal alloy of boron, aluminium and magnesium (AlMgB14) with titanium boride (TiB2). It is the hardest material after diamond and cubic boron nitride. BAM, as the material is called, was discovered at the US Department of Energy Ames Laboratory in Iowa in 199, during attempts to develop a substance to generate electricity when heated. BAM is much slipperier than Teflon, with a coefficient of friction of .02 compared to .05. Lubricated steel has a friction coefficient of 0.16. Bruce Cook, lead investigator on the Ames Lab project, estimates that merely coating rotors with the material could save US industry alone 330 trillion kilojoules (9 billion kilowatt hours) every year by 2030 - about $179 million a year. BAM is also potentially attractive as a hard coating for drill bits and other cutting tools. Diamond is commonly used for this, and is harder, but it reacts chemically with steel and so degrades relatively quickly when used to cut the metal. By contrast, BAM is cheaper and does not degrade when used with steel. The exact reason for the new material's characteristics is still unclear, Russell told New Scientist. Most superhard materials, such as diamond, have a simple, regular and symmetrical crystalline structure. But BAM is complex, unsymmetrical, and its lattice contains gaps, none of which would be expected in a hard material. Its slipperiness is also not entirely understood. Although Russell says the best theory is that the boron interacts with oxygen to make tiny amounts of boron oxide on its surface. They would attract water molecules from the air, to make a slippery coating. "It's almost as if it's a self-lubricating surface. You don't need to add oil or other lubricants. It's inherently slippery," he says. Rest @ http://www.newscientist.com/article/...-accident.html |
They never said they would use that on a rotor.
Plus where are you going to get water inside an engine. |
They would attract water molecules from the air From the air? |
Originally Posted by Razz1
(Post 2738137)
They never said they would use that on a rotor.
Plus where are you going to get water inside an engine. |
Uh........
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good luck with seeing this inside rotary engine anytime soon
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Originally Posted by Razz1
(Post 2738137)
They never said they would use that on a rotor.
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BAM!
Well, seeing as one of the byproducts of combustion is water, I don't think that finding water in an engine is going to be a big deal. Especially if we're moving to hydrogen power in the future. It certainly seems like a promising material. but there's no way to tell if it would make a good apex seal from this article. |
Are there dry enough climates that could potentially not provide enough water? I know it didnt really cover a required amount, but still would be a concern... at least to any company that decided to use that or anyone who would go out and pay for that coating privately that might live in a dry enough climate...
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Originally Posted by Socket7
(Post 2738386)
BAM!
Well, seeing as one of the byproducts of combustion is water, I don't think that finding water in an engine is going to be a big deal. Especially if we're moving to hydrogen power in the future. It certainly seems like a promising material. but there's no way to tell if it would make a good apex seal from this article. |
Does BAM have any implications as to the possible side-effects of what it can do to your engine
VROOOMMM.....BAM! |
alright so, whose going to be the first to volunteer having their engine stripped down and the parts sent to be coated with this stuff?
i know i'd be interested in it if it wasnt too expensive. |
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they are using CERMET, i want to see them using BAM
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Originally Posted by kersh4w
(Post 2739682)
they are using CERMET, i want to see them using BAM
N/A rotaries with cermet housings and ceramic seals will probably last longer than your interest in the car. |
It does seem like this material might be useful in the chain drive of the oil pump and in suspension bushings.
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Originally Posted by Falken
(Post 2739797)
No point, it wouldn't be worth it.
N/A rotaries with cermet housings and ceramic seals will probably last longer than your interest in the car. |
I am thinking to do that to my upcoming new, yes I repeat, NEW engine for my FC, Gonna buy all new parts, then send it off to them to do the Cermet coating, have them or someone build it, and install it back to the car on my own.
Its gonna be expensive tho, meh. :) be the first to use something like this on the street OLD car sounds interesting .... |
Originally Posted by nycgps
(Post 3370340)
I am thinking to do that to my upcoming new, yes I repeat, NEW engine for my FC, Gonna buy all new parts, then send it off to them to do the Cermet coating, have them or someone build it, and install it back to the car on my own.
Its gonna be expensive tho, meh. :) be the first to use something like this on the street OLD car sounds interesting .... |
Go X coating!
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Well, at least it could keep me from cutting up my teflon frying pans. I only see this providing any advantage in a transmission. Sure as hell don't wanna use it to 'lubricate' your tires! ;)
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Originally Posted by Falken
(Post 2738715)
I was somewhat skeptical of their claims when they first brought it to market, because, hey...noone had ever done this before, and this was just a startup operation from the best I could tell. However as they were the only reman option and cheaper than new OEM with promise of better performance, I decided to give it a try. At the time, Marc, the owner, told me that they were in the process of using core housings that they had obtained, for resurfacing, and would be building their inventory up over time for exchange. However if I wanted a faster turnaround, he said I should send my own cores in (which didnt necessarily make sense to me...if they had cores already, but couldn't resurface them in a timely manner, how would having my cores help them any?), so I agreed and sent in a batch. From that point, you can read this thread and get pretty much my entire history with them: http://www.rx7club.com/showthread.php?t=608589 I strongly suggest you read the entire thread. The only other issues to note. The only way I was able to kick them into gear at the end of 2006, was by filing a paypal/creditcard chargeback against them. This put a hold on their account and screwed up their future of collecting more money from other customers, it got Marc's attention REALLY quick and netted a few immediate phone calls, emails, and voicemails....after no regular contact had been forthcoming. Another interesting note that just came to light recently. I obtained a core engine from a car in my area, that was getting a non-turbo to turbo engine swap. The non turbo engine was said to be "blown" and was removed for a JDM turbo engine, and I bought the non turbo core for parts. When I tore it down, I discovered that it was actually one of my engines from years prior (about mid 2005 from what I can tell) and was built with the JHB cermet B housings. It was technically "blown" in that the apex seals were worn down to almost nothing, and in a very odd manner. I have never, in hundreds of rotary engine teardowns, seen wear such as this. The engine couldn't have had more than 30-50k miles on it, but the seals were 85% worn away. Normally I see 20-40% wear on seals, on 100-200k mile engines. This was extreme wear, but only on the apex seals. The side/corner/oil seals were all perfect. Atkins apex seals were used in that build...I have used those seals in hundreds of other builds with great longevity and results. Thus my theory is that the cermet coating is not suitable for any standard steel apex seal (including oem mazda), and because the seal is much softer than the housing with the cermet coating it will wear at many times the normal rate. Then if you conclude that in order to use these cermet housings, you need to use ceramic seals, suddenly they lose their appeal because such a build requires a $5k budget. IT should be noted that I specifically discussed with Marc, prior to purchasing any of his ceramic housings, the need for ceramic seals versus standard steel seals. He assured me that his housings would work fine with standard seals, of course ceramic seals would net more of a power gain, but said their testing revealed no issues with the use of steel seals and their housings. Marc is a great representative for his company and always very courteous, but he's also a smooth talker and will do anything to keep you on the hook. |
Originally Posted by longpath
(Post 3370330)
I'm giving serious consideration to cermet or similar coating when it's time to overhaul the engine.
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Originally Posted by longpath
(Post 3370330)
I'm giving serious consideration to cermet or similar coating when it's time to overhaul the engine.
Originally Posted by RotaryResurrection
(Post 3453217)
Negative ghostrider, abort, I say again, abort!
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No, unfortunately. You may go over to rx7club and read some of "glassman"s posts detailing his attempt to grind and recoat rotor housings, which has been ongoing since the beginning of time NS shows no promise of ever being complete, much less feasible.
As for cermet, the product itself shows promise but will take a lot of trial and error to figure out it's behavior in this engine...I had my fill of being a guinea pig...do you want to fill that role? That is basically what happens anytime a new product is brought to market for these engines. Nobody that develops new things has the time or budget to thoroughly R&D what they are making due to the niche nature of this market and the lack of corporate backing, so most parts have no more than just a few weeks or months of testing in a handful of test engines. I think the product shows promise for certain situations, but their execution of it blows goats. Further I think it is not really a feasible application for 95% of those building rotary engines...that is, on a budget less than $3k. |
It appears that they may be going under. I sent them an email last night and this morning, I see that I received a reply that the mailbox was full (note: I have redacted my email address from this as a hedge against spammers and bots):
From: Mail Delivery System <Mailer-Daemon@server.mjzhosting.info> Date: 2 March 2010 21:58:40 EST To: REDACTED Subject: Mail delivery failed: returning message to sender This message was created automatically by mail delivery software. A message that you sent could not be delivered to one or more of its recipients. This is a permanent error. The following address(es) failed: info@jhbperformance.com mailbox is full: retry timeout exceeded mcouture@jhbperformance.com (ultimately generated from info@jhbperformance.com) mailbox is full: retry timeout exceeded ------ This is a copy of the message, including all the headers. ------ Return-path: <REDACTED> Received: from mta5.srv.hcvlny.cv.net ([167.206.4.200]:48531) by server.mjzhosting.info with esmtp (Exim 4.69) (envelope-from <REDACTED>) id 1NmenI-0001Ln-81 for info@jhbperformance.com; Tue, 02 Mar 2010 20:58:40 -0600 Received: from [10.0.1.2] (ool-45784226.dyn.optonline.net [69.120.66.38]) by mta5.srv.hcvlny.cv.net (Sun Java System Messaging Server 6.2-8.04 (built Feb 28 2007)) with ESMTPA id <0KYO00D07QXO6A70@mta5.srv.hcvlny.cv.net> for info@jhbperformance.com; Tue, 02 Mar 2010 21:58:40 -0500 (EST) Date: Tue, 02 Mar 2010 21:58:35 -0500 From: Lane Lombardia Subject: Experimentation with your CERMET coatins To: info@jhbperformance.com Message-id: <BF7842D8-A6BB-4C65-BFE5-436010A02BE7@optonline.net> MIME-version: 1.0 X-Mailer: Apple Mail (2.936) Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; format=flowed; delsp=yes Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT X-Spam-Status: No, score=0.0 X-Spam-Score: 0 X-Spam-Bar: / X-Spam-Flag: NO Dear Sir or Madame: I am curious if anyone at your firm has experimented with producing aluminium end/side housings finished with any of your firm's CERMET coatings, and if so, has your firm tested any engines with this configuration? It seems to me that if such an item was viable, the weight savings it would offer would make such a product well worth consideration. Additionally, I am putting together a budget for the eventual rebuild of my 2004 RX-8's engine. Rotor Housing with CERMET X $750.00 Rotor Housing with CERMET X $750.00 Intermediate Renesis with CERMET X $585.00 Front/Rear Renesis with CERMET X $500.00 Front/Rear Renesis with CERMET X $500.00 Thermal barrier ceramic coated rotor $150.00 Thermal barrier ceramic coated rotor $150.00 As a starting point, I tabulate the above items coming to $3385.00 I would like to know how much street porting would add, and how much would be charged to remove the engine from the car, disassemble it, perform the above services (I'm not clear on whether the 3mm EDM cutting is needed for ceramic apex seals for the Renesis or not, so please advise me on that point), then reassemble the engine using ceramic seals (especially the apex seals) and reinstall it in my car. Also, what would the necessary turn-around time be? I propose, when I have assembled the necessary budget, to drive to your facility, or the facility of whatever rebuilder you may use (your choice), pay your firm for the services described, check myself into lodgings in your area, wait until the car is ready, pick it up, and then drive back to the US. This is a distance of 2,721 Km, so I would also need to know what the break-in procedure is for an engine with your coatings (or does your rebuilder break the engine in prior to installation in the car?). Thanks and Regards, Lane Lombardia |
Originally Posted by longpath
(Post 3454365)
It appears that they may be going under. I sent them an email last night and this morning, I see that I received a reply that the mailbox was full (note: I have redacted my email address from this as a hedge against spammers and bots):
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Originally Posted by RotaryResurrection
(Post 3454895)
They are not a rotary repair shop and would have no interest in building an engine for you or working on your car....unless something has changed dramatically from when I dealt with them. They worked only with the individual components of engines.
Now I need to determine if there is another company that offers something akin to this but without the drama and quality deficiencies. Perhaps http://www.rotorsportsracing.com/per...gine_parts.htm |
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