Hi Greg,
>At min slip there is probably only a 5-10 hp difference between a fluid coupling and a mechanical system. At max slip it isn't nearly as good. There is certainly an advantage to the variable speed drive, but not on the order of several hundred hp.
The British estimated the minimum slip of the DB601A-1 to be 3% and the maximum 20%.
The advantage of the hydraulic coupling is pretty obvious in the AVIA 6/9352 DB601A engine chart: At sea level, the engine gains about 110 HP (going from 880 HP at 3% slip to 990 HP at 20% slip).
At about 5600 ft, the gain begins to decrease because the supercharger speed increases, and at full throttle height, it's down to maximum speed, minimum slip and actually loses a couple of HP compared to a fixed ratio supercharger.
As the maximum power gain is about 12.5%, the hydraulic clutch definitely improves performance markedly - compared to a fixed-ratio single-speed supercharger at least.
If you're thinking of a two-speed supercharger, the advantage of course is not as obvious since the fixed-ratio supercharger, if the fixed ratios are chosen to correspond to minimum and maximum slip ratios of the hydraulic clutch, will actually outperform the variable-ratio engine below low gear full throttle height and above high gear full throttle height.
Still, I'd expect the hydraulic coupling to give a higher integral of power of altitude because it avoids the power minimum above low gear full throttle height.
I believe Allison introduced hydraulic couplings on their late V-1710 variants with two-speed supercharger drives, making the comparison even more complicated :-)
Regards,
Henning (HoHun)