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#91
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I disagree, the engines described first by "Sportpilot" and later by
"Don Stauffer" are, with certainty, auto-ignition engines, but I do not believe they are Diesel, because I have not found verification they are constant-pressure expansion, a key defining characteristic of Diesel operation. They are more-likely homogeneous-mixture-autoignition ("knock ignition") engines... this can resemble Diesel, to the uninitiated... Walt K. Don Stauffer wrote: > Walt K. wrote: > >> actually, the model (glo-plug) engines are *NOT* Diesel, nor are they >> compression ignition... they closely resemble hot-bulb ignition, since >> the platinum wire in the glo-plug does remain red-hot during engine >> operation... >> >> Sport Pilot wrote: >> >>> >>> >>> A compression ignition engine is not always a Diesel engine. Not sure >>> if Mr. Diesel invented comprssion ignition, but they used to be common >>> for model aircraft. Though called Diesel's modelers are often reminded >>> they are not really Diesel's. >>> > No, Sport Pilot had it right. There are BOTH glow plug and Diesel model > airplane engines (actually, there are also si gas engines). The Diesel > ones do NOT have a glowplug, and run on Diesel fuel. It used to be so > strange to see a guy carrying his engine back to pits, flipping the prop > and hearing the engine sputter and cough and run a few seconds. The glow > engines needed a starting battery. > > These engines are, nor never were, all that popular, but they have been > around for half a century. In fact, there is one company that makes > modified heads to convert a number of models of glow engine into "Diesel". |
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#92
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The litmus test for me is whether or not fuel is present in the cylinder
at the start of the compression stroke. If the fuel is already there, and is ignited either by a spark, a glow plug/hot head, or even a "pilot" injection of diesel as in a CNG "diesel" engine, then its not running in a true diesel combustion mode. The true diesel cycle achieves its approximation of constant-pressure expansion by gradually (relative to the piston speed- its actually very fast) injecting the fuel AS the piston moves down. Walt K. wrote: > I disagree, the engines described first by "Sportpilot" and later by > "Don Stauffer" are, with certainty, auto-ignition engines, but I do not > believe they are Diesel, because I have not found verification they are > constant-pressure expansion, a key defining characteristic of Diesel > operation. They are more-likely homogeneous-mixture-autoignition ("knock > ignition") engines... this can resemble Diesel, to the uninitiated... > > Walt K. > > Don Stauffer wrote: > >> Walt K. wrote: >> >>> actually, the model (glo-plug) engines are *NOT* Diesel, nor are they >>> compression ignition... they closely resemble hot-bulb ignition, >>> since the platinum wire in the glo-plug does remain red-hot during >>> engine operation... >>> >>> Sport Pilot wrote: >>> >>>> >>>> >>>> A compression ignition engine is not always a Diesel engine. Not sure >>>> if Mr. Diesel invented comprssion ignition, but they used to be common >>>> for model aircraft. Though called Diesel's modelers are often reminded >>>> they are not really Diesel's. >>>> >> No, Sport Pilot had it right. There are BOTH glow plug and Diesel >> model airplane engines (actually, there are also si gas engines). The >> Diesel ones do NOT have a glowplug, and run on Diesel fuel. It used >> to be so strange to see a guy carrying his engine back to pits, >> flipping the prop and hearing the engine sputter and cough and run a >> few seconds. The glow engines needed a starting battery. >> >> These engines are, nor never were, all that popular, but they have >> been around for half a century. In fact, there is one company that >> makes modified heads to convert a number of models of glow engine into >> "Diesel". |
#93
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Steve wrote: > Sport Pilot wrote: > > > I think most of us know that torque is only a force and you need speed > > (RPM) to develop power. More speed is more power. Or was there some > > other point you are trying to make? > > > > > II think the point is that there are TWO ways that do an equally good > job of increasing power. More TORQUE is more power too. > > Since power=K*Torque*RPM, the result is that if you hold the speed > constant and double the torque, you get double the power. There are > diesel engines in this world that develop 20,000 horespower at only 150 > RPM. Naturally, the torque value is astronomical. No, they don't fly. > ;-) They swim. Why the obvious apple and orange comparision? I can show you a model diesel engine of less than 1/2 cubic engine that turns about 10,000 RPM? So what. A large engine is going to turn less RPM because of its rotation mass. You need to compare engines of equal size. The model diesel engines will not turn as fast as the gas or methanol/nitro engines because the fuel (ether and kerosene) will not burn as fast. But they will put out more torque than the other two types, though only marginally more than gasoline. This is because the fuel burns slower, not because of the cycle, because all, the spark ignition gas engine, the glow plug methanol/nitro engine, and the compression ignition engine, are actually otto cycle engines. |
#94
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Sport Pilot wrote:
> Why the obvious apple and orange comparision? To refute the statement that "more speed is more power." > You need to compare engines of equal size. OK, Lets do it! Dodge 5.9 Liter v8 gasoline engine: 230 horsepower at ~5000 RPM Compared to: Dodge/Cummins 5.9 Liter turbo-diesel engine: 325 horsepower at 2900 RPM More speed is NOT more power any more than more torque at the same speed is more power. |
#95
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Sport Pilot wrote:
The model > diesel engines will not turn as fast as the gas or methanol/nitro > engines because the fuel (ether and kerosene) will not burn as fast. I say again: there is no magic rule that says "diesel burns slower" than gasoline. Increasing the boost pressure can increase the burn rate AS MUCH AS YOU WANT. Its just not done most of the time, because no one WANTS a 7000 RPM engine when a 4000 RPM engine is available to do the same job. People only build 7000 RPM engines when there's no other way to get the power. > This is because the fuel burns slower, > not because of the cycle, because all, the spark ignition gas engine, > the glow plug methanol/nitro engine, and the compression ignition > engine, are actually otto cycle engines. No, that's already been covered. Diesel (true diesel with either direct or pre-chamber injection) is a subtly different cycle than the Otto cycle. Its constant-pressure combustion instead of constant-volume combustion. |
#96
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Steve > writes:
> Sport Pilot wrote: > > > Why the obvious apple and orange comparision? > > > To refute the statement that "more speed is more power." > > > You need to compare engines of equal size. > > > OK, Lets do it! > > Dodge 5.9 Liter v8 gasoline engine: 230 horsepower at ~5000 RPM > > Compared to: > > Dodge/Cummins 5.9 Liter turbo-diesel engine: 325 horsepower at 2900 RPM > > > More speed is NOT more power any more than more torque at the same > speed is more power. uh? More torque at the same speed *is* more power. power = torque * speed Had the gas engine produced the same torque at 5000 rpms as the diesel do at 2900, then it would have had about 560 hp at 5000. Thomas |
#97
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"Thomas Tornblom" -to-reply> wrote in message ... > Steve > writes: > >> Sport Pilot wrote: >> >> >> More speed is NOT more power any more than more torque at the same >> speed is more power. > > uh? > Yeah, that was my reaction! (?) ;-) > More torque at the same speed *is* more power. > > power = torque * speed > > Had the gas engine produced the same torque at 5000 rpms as the diesel > do at 2900, then it would have had about 560 hp at 5000. > > Thomas Actually, the equation to calculate power (or horsepower (HP) in this case) is HP = Torque X rpm / 5252. Torque being a measurable force that turns the crankshaft and ultimately the wheels, main rotor, or propeller (I just noticed that this is going to two aviation and one automotive newsgroups). Horsepower is defined as a "measurement" of work performed. By the equation, at least as it applies to internal combustion reciprocating engines, you can't have HP without torque! So, if you can increase the torque value at a given rpm, you'll increase the power output at that rpm. Likewise, if you can maintain a given torque value at a higher rpm, you'll produce more power in that case too. It doesn't matter what kind of engine you're talking about or the fuel burned. Gasoline, diesel, methanol, it makes no difference. The equation still applies. FWIW! Fly/Drive Safe, Steve R. |
#98
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Steve wrote: > Sport Pilot wrote: > > > Why the obvious apple and orange comparision? > > To refute the statement that "more speed is more power." > > > You need to compare engines of equal size. > > OK, Lets do it! > > Dodge 5.9 Liter v8 gasoline engine: 230 horsepower at ~5000 RPM > > Compared to: > > Dodge/Cummins 5.9 Liter turbo-diesel engine: 325 horsepower at 2900 RPM > > > More speed is NOT more power any more than more torque at the same speed > is more power. Steve, As you said power is torque * RPM, so for the same torque more speed is power. In fact with 0 RPM you have no power only a force. No I have not argued that desiels cannot deliver power by increasing torque. Only that their inherent design and fuel limits their maximum speed. Your example is a poor one most diesels of equivelant size will deliver more torque at less RPM and have less total horsepower. I don't know where you found that pitiful Dodge 5.9 liter engine. I have a 4.7 V8 in my Grand Cherokee and it puts out 260+ HP. I know that the 5.7 Liter hemi V8 puts out about 320 or so HP and it is not turbocharged. So that is a more equal comparison. Unlike the apple orange examples you put up. |
#99
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Steve wrote: > Sport Pilot wrote: > > The model > > diesel engines will not turn as fast as the gas or methanol/nitro > > engines because the fuel (ether and kerosene) will not burn as fast. > > > I say again: there is no magic rule that says "diesel burns slower" than > gasoline. Increasing the boost pressure can increase the burn rate AS > MUCH AS YOU WANT. Its just not done most of the time, because no one > WANTS a 7000 RPM engine when a 4000 RPM engine is available to do the > same job. People only build 7000 RPM engines when there's no other way > to get the power. > > > This is because the fuel burns slower, > > not because of the cycle, because all, the spark ignition gas engine, > > the glow plug methanol/nitro engine, and the compression ignition > > engine, are actually otto cycle engines. > > No, that's already been covered. Diesel (true diesel with either direct > or pre-chamber injection) is a subtly different cycle than the Otto > cycle. Its constant-pressure combustion instead of constant-volume > combustion. I was not quite correct if I said desiel fuel burns slower, it is however made to ignite better with desiel engines so that the fuel ignites spontanously when injected. The fuel burns slower because it is injected over a period of time. However, I may have been correct about the model fuel. There are diesel conversion heads for model glow engines. This replaces the head and glow plug with a head with a varible compression. You adjust the timing by adjusting the compression. The fuel is a mix of kerosene, ether, amyl nitrate, and oil. This fuel will ignite at a much lower temperature than true desiel fuel. The ether and amyl nitrate are the componets which ignite at a low temp. Though ether is extremely volatile it is not a very high energy fuel and I think it burns slowly. These converted engines will turn large propellers at slower speeds than the glow engines they were converted from. Another example of a high energy fuel that limits speed is nitromethane. Because it is a monopropellent the racers can pretty much inject as much as their ignition can ignite, except for hydrolocking. That is if more fuel is injected than the combustion chamber volume the engine will blow up. But nitro burns slowly so RPM is more or less limited to just over 10,000 RPM loaded. The slow burning is why you see huge flames coming out the exhaust. |
#100
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On Tue, 24 May 2005 21:54:29 GMT, Thomas Tornblom
-to-reply> wrote: >Steve > writes: > >> Sport Pilot wrote: >> >> > Why the obvious apple and orange comparision? >> >> >> To refute the statement that "more speed is more power." >> >> > You need to compare engines of equal size. >> >> >> OK, Lets do it! >> >> Dodge 5.9 Liter v8 gasoline engine: 230 horsepower at ~5000 RPM >> >> Compared to: >> >> Dodge/Cummins 5.9 Liter turbo-diesel engine: 325 horsepower at 2900 RPM >> >> >> More speed is NOT more power any more than more torque at the same >> speed is more power. > One BIG factor is being forgotten here. The diesel is turboed. This makes it roughly equivalent to an 8 liter engine at about 6psi boost. Any combustion engine produces power in proportion to the amount of air consumed. On a diesel it does not necessarily "consume" all the air that goes through it - but the maximum power output is definitely limitted by how much air can be put through it. A turbo can eisily double the amount of air an engine pumps through it at a given speed. Running an engine at double the speed also increases the amount of air going through the engine - not quite double due to reduced volumetric efficiency at speed. Double the CFM gives double the horsepower, before factoring in frictional losses and / or pumping losses. A naturally aspirated diesel engine generally produces less HP per unit of displacement, but more torque at low RPMs due in part to less pumping loss (no air throttle) >uh? > >More torque at the same speed *is* more power. > >power = torque * speed > >Had the gas engine produced the same torque at 5000 rpms as the diesel >do at 2900, then it would have had about 560 hp at 5000. > >Thomas |
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