Interesting new diesel engine
I've seen HUGE Fairbanks-Morse opposed piston engines driving water pumps at the Charles River Dam in Boston. These engines have a simply outstanding 40% thermodynamic efficiency (base on the LHV of fuel) when turbocharged.
Here's a company making a smaller version: https://www.dieseltech.cc/product.htm The engine was designed for airplanes, so it's very light compared to most diesels. |
My favourite weird diesel is a gigantic 2-stroke pile driver I saw on the Discovery Channel, where the pile "hammer" is the piston.
This company sells them: https://www.berminghammer.com/hammer.html And they even have a video of a "little" one in action: https://www.berminghammer.com/Flash/B6505compress.mpg https://www.berminghammer.com/img/big-hammer.gif |
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I saw that pile driver too...how smart! Just adjust the rate of diesel injection...set it and forget it!
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what a great idea that is!!! no head and super charge it to ensure that it gets a fresh breath each time. killer.
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The most interesting two stroke diesel I saw (well, as an article with photos in a magazine) was a compression ignition assisted Pogo stick! It was in the early to mid 70's and I believe it was Popular Science.
<edit> Well, it wasn't diesel after all. https://www.bpmlegal.com/wpogo.html <end edit> |
a friend of mine has a hop rod, he's retired, and mildly afrade to use it, and want's to be the first person to try it out... it's an awsome piece of hardware.
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nucking futs!
If you want to see a massive diesel though, google worlds most powerful diesel or something like that. They're BIG guys used in commercial tanker ships. Turn at 100rpm making ungodly horsepower and torque and have something like 50% thermal effeciency in cruise mode. |
I just did come calculations and found that a container ship going 30 mph will get .00687 mpg! Sounds like container ship companies need to start coming here for pointers.
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simaler to how city busses only get about 4mpg...
compare work done, to fuel used, a contaner ship is hauling alot of stuff, each contaner is limited to what? 45,000 pounds? I think that's about right, and the ship has hundereds of contaners. |
Mostly Emissions
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But, as mentioned by Ryland, the MPG per ton is also an important consideration. That's why it's more efficient to ship the containers on land via a Diesel-Electric trainset than one truck per container. |
Aeromod? :confused:
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Opposed piston diesel
When it comes to opposed piston diesels I have really admired this one too.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napier_Deltic This is a clever bit of work. :D Ernie |
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A 320 ci engine burning av-gas can cruise at around 7 gph (maybe better even). Most gas turbine engines are eating something like 20+ gph. And as far as I understand, most gas-turbine engines use Jet-A fuel - which is interchangeable with diesel. If Lycoming made a diesel engine for GA, people could fill up with diesel or Jet-A, both of which are typically cheaper than 100LL. |
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There are other factors as well. One MAJOR factor is the age and design of the engine. Early gas turbines were HORRIBLE when it came to fuel consumption. A typical early turborop/jet had an eficiency of around 15% (or so). So a plane using such an engine would tend to be a fuel hog. And since turbines last a long time, there are certainly ALOT of these older, less efficient ones running around out there. But even newer turbines can be guzzlers simply because a manufacturer might continue to build an older design. These older turbine designs tend to be cheaper to produce, since (1) there is no need to engineer a new engine, and (2) they use less exotic materials and less precise tolerances. They may guzzle. But at least they are reliable and proven. So the design continues to be produced. And these cheaper turbines tend to be used on lower powered turbines used on smaller and cheaper planes. Speaking of low power turbines, another factor that reduces efficiency is the use of radial flow turbines/compressors vs axial flow. Radial flow engines are inherently MUCH less efficient than axial flow engines. And, as with older designs, radial flow engines are cheaper to produce. So they tend to find their place in ALOT of general aviation applications. On the other hand, larger turbines used in airliners, like the GE CF6-80 series, are VERY efficient - around 40%. While it is hard to say how well the efficiency would scale down to a smaller size, it is certainly true that MUCH higher efficiency is possible even on smaller engines with design improvements. On the other hand, it would increase cost, which is probably why such improvements are generally not made. |
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I do understand your argument about SFC, and it is true. I was just mentioning that you will be pressed to find a turbine that produces such small amounts of power. The airplane I'm building will use the O-320 engine that produces only 160 hp and will not break a sweat to see 180 mph. I do agree though, that GA engine technology is decades (over 50 years) old - it's time for a new breakthrough, and maybe someone developing a reliable, inexpensive, low operating cost turbine engine is the ticket. The main reason we don't see tons of people running around in GA with turbine engines (and why companies aren't building them) is cost. The cost to own one is high, and the cost for repairs / parts is high. I work for a company that repairs gas turbine engines, and when I started, I was blown away with sticker shock. Companies don't bat an eye to buy an $85,000 part that you can hold in your hands. Service bulletins are often published with ways to increase engine efficiency even small amounts and the parts lists totals well over $1 million per engine. Granted, we are talking about 40K to 90K lb-thrust engines here. Even still, the TRS-18 parts are not cheap by any means. |
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On the other hand, microturbines are a recent, interesting development. These small turbines often have power outputs of 100KW or less, yet have efficiency ratings in the 30s - despite using centrifugal turbines and compressors. They do, however, use regenerators (which heat the compressor outlet with the turbine outlet). And this is typically not seen in aircraft engines due to the size and weight. They are typically used for generators, but might even work well in cars. But ultimately, fuel cells are probaby a better idea for cars. Of course, the REAL solution with turbines is materials that can take higher temperatures. As you probably know, increasing the pressure ratio increases power output (this is one area where centrifugal compressors fall short - they can't support higher pressure ratios). But higher pressure ratios make for higher turbine firing temperatures, which tends to melt turbines. Ceramics havebeen looked at for some time for this purpose. But they still tend to break. Oh, well. |
Google 'Junkers Jumo 208 aircraft engines.' This opposed-piston diesel was used on the Hindenberg and in Junkers high-altitude recon planes in World War II.
In engines, there is little new under the sun. |
More on the old Junkers Jumo 205
https://www.geocities.com/hjunkers/ju_jumo205_m1.htm https://www.iet.auc.dk/sec2/junkers.htm The Graf Spee ran on nine-cylinder two-stroke opposed-piston MAN diesel engines. Fairbanks-Morse still makes opposed-piston diesels https://www.fairbanksmorse.com/engine...rine_power.php Opposed-piston engines must be two-stroke engines because they have no place for valves. Two-stroke engines are generally very dirty (in terms of particulate and unburned hydrocarbons), but they are very tolerant of fuel quality. EPA emission regs have essentially killed the two-stroke engine in the US outside of locomotive and ship engines. Fairbanks-Morse engines are said to be able to run any fuel even sort of oily. The only thing that defeats a F-M is aviation gasoline. The Germans have even run opposed piston diesels on a oil-coal slurry. Being two-strokes, they can be very light for their power output. Opposed-piston engines are seductive to nations with limited manufacturing capability because they have no high-precision valves. The Junkers Jumo had fourteen main bearings (easy to make) and no valves. A V-12 EMD two stroker has 48 valves and seven main bearings. |
Never say never
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No? Why not? |
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