Well it is obvious that you are someone that needs a road map and can not grasp the relevance of what was presented.
You did not recognise that you were making an error by calculating the volume without taking into account the atmospheric pressure for the gauge term. Hence the absolute and gauge pressures reference.
You did not grasp the fact that the compressibility factor is greater than 1 for air at 2640.
The compressibility factor indicates that the difference in calculated volume using a liner approximation (ideal gas equation/boyles law) for volume and real gas EOS is the most likely factor.
OMS is using the vdW EOS. Since they did not specify the reference for the constants it would be a guess which ones they used. (FYI, each reference has slightly different values for these constants, and some references even have different values for different editions.) Which is why I gave you the B-B EOS value. It was a BIG red flag that you missed.
Next, the temperature and altitude terms are right there in the equation. All you have to do is plug them in.
But it is very simple clown boy. When the pressure is reduced (by going to altitude) the apparent delivered volume will increase, the temperature will have the same relationship.
The best part of this is the the value for the OMS 108 is 17L not 19L. Another screwup by you. You really need to pay closer attention to what you are doing. Which was the whole point of the original post.
And just so you know, I use the altitude equation on a regular basis. That is why I could give the general equation and the derivation of it.
omar
You did not recognise that you were making an error by calculating the volume without taking into account the atmospheric pressure for the gauge term. Hence the absolute and gauge pressures reference.
You did not grasp the fact that the compressibility factor is greater than 1 for air at 2640.
The compressibility factor indicates that the difference in calculated volume using a liner approximation (ideal gas equation/boyles law) for volume and real gas EOS is the most likely factor.
OMS is using the vdW EOS. Since they did not specify the reference for the constants it would be a guess which ones they used. (FYI, each reference has slightly different values for these constants, and some references even have different values for different editions.) Which is why I gave you the B-B EOS value. It was a BIG red flag that you missed.
Next, the temperature and altitude terms are right there in the equation. All you have to do is plug them in.
But it is very simple clown boy. When the pressure is reduced (by going to altitude) the apparent delivered volume will increase, the temperature will have the same relationship.
The best part of this is the the value for the OMS 108 is 17L not 19L. Another screwup by you. You really need to pay closer attention to what you are doing. Which was the whole point of the original post.
And just so you know, I use the altitude equation on a regular basis. That is why I could give the general equation and the derivation of it.
omar