FEATURES :: SUPERCHARGER TECH
Roots Type Superchargers Explained
4/5/2002 9:14:00 PM
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History
The roots style supercharger is the oldest type
of supercharger and dates back to the early 1900's when it was first used as
an industrial air-moving device. In the past 30 years or so, however, the roots
style supercharger has undergone drastic changes and has become so efficient
and quiet that it is now commonly used as a forced induction system for automotive
applications. The roots style supercharger, while still the least thermally
efficient supercharger design (versus centrifugal and screw-type designs), has
found a home on board top fuel dragsters as well as on modern Mercedes, Ford,
and GM passenger cars as an original equipment power adder.
How it Works
| The roots type supercharger
is two counter-rotating meshed lobed rotors. The two rotors trap air in
the gaps between rotors and push it against the compressor housing as
they rotate towards the outlet/discharge port. During each rotation, a
specific fixed amount of air is trapped and moved to the outlet port where
it is compressed, which is why the roots type supercharger falls under
the broader catogory of fixed-displacement superchargers (like the twin
screw supercharger).
Advantages & Disadvantages
The roots type supercharger is known for its ability
to produce large amounts of boost while spinning at very low speeds.
On an automotive application, a roots type supercharger can often make
it's full (peak) boost by 2000 engine rpm. This characteristic has contributed
to its success and popularity on the top fuel racing circuit and has
made it ideal for use on smaller 4 and 6 cylinder engines that traditionally
struggle in the lower half of the rpm range (and is why Jackson Racing
uses a roots type Eaton compressor). Another advantageous characteristic
of the roots type supercharger is its simplicity of design. The roots
type supercharger has very few moving parts and spins at low rpms, making
it one of the more reliable and durable supercharger designs.
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The big disadvantage to the roots type supercharger
is its thermal inefficiency - or its nature to produce high discharge temperatures
- which robs power from the engine. With a roots type supercharger, an intercooler
is almost always a necessity to bring the air charge temperatures down to an
acceptable level. This poor thermal efficiency can be attributed to the fact
that it has no internal compression (compression is done after the air leaves
the discharge port). Additional heat is created by compressed (hot) air that
leaks backwards past the rotors and heats up the temperature of the inlet charge.
Conclusion
The roots type supercharger is the oldest type
of supercharger and still has its place in the automotive world on dragsters,
smaller engines, and trucks - all of which are need power in the bottom half
of the rpm range. Most major manufacturers have steered away from roots type
superchargers likely because they create so much heat, even at low levels of
boost. Like the screw-type supercharger, it is also difficult to create very
high levels of boost with a roots type supercharger. Nonetheless, several manufacturers
(Magnuson/MagnaCharger, Saleen, Allen,, Jackson - all use an Eaton roots compressor)
have been able to design automotive supercharger systems that make good use
of the roots type compressor's advantages while overcoming its shortcomings.
If you do purchase a roots-type supercharger, expect incredible power gains
right off of idle. You can also be assured that you will have one of the most
simple and dependable superchargers available, which is why automobile manufacturers
(GM, Ford, Mercedes) generally choose roots compressors for OE applications.
An intercooler will most likely be necessary at boost levels above 6psi with
a roots supercharger.
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