Thread: liquid nitrogen
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Old 10-30-2004, 09:29 PM   #12
Fasterthanyou
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Montgomery NJ
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Ask any materials engineer at any college with a decent program and he'll give you the REAL DEAL. He can explain to you what happens when you freeze metal parts. When you quench metal parts special things happen. Just like when you heat up a metal part you anneal it, the results are a softer metal. Quenching metal changes its properties, that's basically what freezing it is doing, making it harder. Harder as in more rigid. Other things happen but in general, a rigid part doesn't flex as much resulting in less heat (energy) from internal friction. Ever bend a piece of metal until it breaks and notice that the break is rather warm... energy.... connecting rods, blocks, cranks, pistons, they all do the same thing. I can see how a more rigid assembly would save a couple horsepower in that respect, NOT because it's slippy, that just doesn't make much sence. Keep in mind that a hard metal SEEMS slippery because it's so hard.
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