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Diesel Engines

Discussion in 'Diesels' started by durallymax, Feb 27, 2010.

  1. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I am not suggesting each farm pony up the cash. In the EU, the various governments chip in, and usually the farmer is covering 1/4 to 1/3 the cost

    A similar program here would provide many benefits: reduction in nitrogen offsite, reduction in odor complaints from large-scale farms, net positive electricity back into grid, etc etc

    When rural America and rural Canada were first hooked up to the electric grid, that was a massive publicly-funded undertaking. I don't think anybody now questions or doubts the efficacy of that old program, which still exists in some form, such as the RUS administered under the USDA

    Which is ironic considering those very agencies are the ones to publicly raise a stink - pardon the pun - about the issue of manure

    Makes one wonder exactly where all that taxpayer money is really going, doesn't it? On average, around 50% of taxpayer programs are simply wasted, the money evaporated on Administrative and other such nonsense

    Do you have any experience with oilfield applications? Most of the gas out there is "sour" gas. Whether turbine or recip, extra care must be taken while run on sour gas.

    First and foremost, a recip engine running on natural gas needs an engine oil designed JUST for natural gas operation. Using a conventional motor oil, or a "conventional" synthetic, you will experience very high nitration, valve seat recession, etc

    For gas with high levels of H2S, you can get decent life out of the engine if an oil intended just for sour gas operation is selected. This is one such oil, all the major oil companies offer similar oils with OEM approvals

    http://lubricants.petro-canada.ca/resource/download.aspx?type=TechData&iproduct=892&language=en

    These oils work very well on the large V-16's and V-20's operated on oil platforms and oil fields running strictly on sour gas.

    On a very large industrial scale, natural gas is "scrubbed" before delivery. If DOE and USDA would actually get their heads out of their collective asses, they could provide relatively low-cost small scale H2S scrubbers

    As Manitoba has about the lowest electricity rates in North America (A surprising number of new homes are equipped with electric furnaces or electric baseboard heat), that is a none-starter. But incentives could result in efficient net-positive grid contribution at lower cost than building a 20 billion dollar power dam

    Problem is, engineers like myself are rarely consulted on these issues. In government, a lot of the decision makers are career Public Servants with no clue whatsoever. You're lucky if they are a bean counter or a lawyer, which is useless for complex engineering

    I'm familiar with large-scale turbines, which are aero-derivative. There are a handful of the so-called "microturbine" but they have little advantage over recip in sour gas feed

    Typically, you will experience rapid GG rotor erosion with H2S exposure. Turbines intended for H2S operation often require daily "washing" of the GG rotor section. Operation with H2S has much lower impact on turbo oil life, but much greater impact on GG rotor, combuster, etc.

    If the erosion causes inclusions to form in the blades, a blade separation is a pretty ugly and catastrophic event

    That is what I meant about incentives to ensure this sort of system can be installed and used by the average farmer. One thing I don't understand is this weird North American thing with "environmentalists" that appear to want to shut down every farm out there

    Whether methane collection or in-situ co-gen, the solution is light years better than just spraying s*** onto fields, or letting s*** ooze into waterways. Yet a lot of these crackpots can't see that, they'd rather just shut down the farm and expect us to live on soybeans and seaweed

    Yeah, that is crap - pardon the pun. If the farmer is saddled with even more costs, it makes a lot more sense to leave the industry altogether and let somebody else deal with the headache

    Interesting in that if you take away all the credits, grants, incentives, etc, you would not find a single oil well in the Canadian arctic, nor a single deep sea oil platform

    As far as net contribution, we are actually "throwing away" free energy every day. Every time you clean out a barn, or flush your toilet after taking a crap, you are throwing away free energy

    Much like how everybody whines about human wastewater disposal, while ignoring the huge potential for energy production. We'd much rather flush it away, literally

    My neighbor is almost ready to set his on fire. True that everything is warranty but that doesn't count the downtime when the truck is in the shop, and everybody is scratching their pointy heads

    He actually did have a problem with one of his older Detroit 60 motors. He'd be driving along, the engine quits, and could not be restarted. Wait a few hours, it would fire right up

    Check engine light is on. He pulls into a Detroit shop, they say it's the crank sensor, replace it. A few months later, quits again, ditto. Starts to get expensive.

    So, one day the truck actually quit in his yard, he pushed it into his shop, and calls me over. Wants to know if I know anything about Detroit motors. Well, no, not really, but I do understand the electronics behind it

    He wants to know if there is a way to test the crank sensor. Well, sure there is. It's a Hall Effect sensor, I know how to test them. He pulls out the crank sensor, and it's loaded up with metal shavings

    "Well, there's your problem," I say

    I clean off the shavings, he puts the sensor back in, and the motor fires right up. I have no doubt the two times he paid a flunky to replace the sensor, at $260 plus labor plus downtime, they noticed shavings stuck to the sensor head.

    But they just replaced the sensor without comment. Gotta keep the economy moving along

    I happened to notice one brand new part on his motor, the air compressor. The other one blew about 3 months previous. No doubt, when it went, a lot of debris got into the motor

    He went through the trouble of taking off the oil pan, tons of shavings inside. I suggested he use a magnetic probe, remove the crank and cam sensors, and fish around for more shavings. He did that, and 3 years later when he sold the truck, it was running perfectly

    My point being is that nobody understands how to diagnose a problem anymore. They just replace expensive parts until the problem magically goes away

    Oh, and that 1.5 year old Kenworth/Cummins. He had me over last month, it was in his shop. With the hood pulled up, at the firewall all the connectors are plugged into. Most of them look like large DIN connectors, same as would be used for industrial apps

    I started tugging on the connectors, and one very easily popped out. It was barely seated. Used some electrical contact cleaner on the connectors, went back to my place to find a tube of connector grease, smeared it on, and reseated all those connectors

    I then told him to track down every ground point, back off the bolt, spray penetrant into it, then grease it, and snug them back up.

    Well, cross our fingers, it has been a month now, and the truck is still running ok. It will even crank at -10 F or colder.

    Now, why didn't either the Kenworth shop, or the Cummins shop, do that? First thing they do is plug in their code reader, it claims everything it ok, and they write down "no problem found."

    This is a real pet peeve of mine

    With the trucking industry imploding the way it now is, the last thing they need to deal with is 10-20% lower fuel economy
     
  2. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    I just helped my son salvage an $800 electric/gas range. His neighbor tossed it out because the electronic controller was dead and it was going to cost $400 to fix it. I replaced $2 worth of electrolytic capacitors and it is now as good as new. This sort of waste really bothers me.

    Tom
     
  3. Politburo

    Politburo Active Member

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    There's not much to understand. In most cases, these people simply don't exist. They are manufactured strawmen designed to make any environmentalist appear "extreme". This tactic works very well, especially in the US where the political left is afraid of their own shadow. (NB: All sides use this trick)

    In the rare case that you can actually find someone who will genuinely express such an opinion, well, they are simply an idiot. As far as I know, the natural habitat of idiots is not limited to North America.
     
  4. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    That was indeed more than I wanted to know about diesel engines, so I skipped over some bits, but overall was interesting.

    Now a bit of trivia: I posted something about this 2 or 3 years ago, so I think it's okay to repeat:

    It would have been some time back in the 1970's, the dairy farm I worked on had an old tractor which I think was called a Super WD-4. Something at the back of my mind says Allis Chalmers, but I won't swear to that. It started on gasoline and then ran on diesel. There was a lever that switched the compression between low and high, a lever or switch that changed the fuel between gasoline and diesel, and a switch to turn the spark plugs on and off. There was a very small gas tank and a full-size diesel tank.

    To start the tractor you'd shut off the spark, set the fuel to gasoline, and the compression to low. Then you'd press the starter, and the engine would turn over like a car with an almost dead battery, soooooooooo slowly. After a bit it would catch and run pretty rough, and smoke would come up thick. You'd let it run for about 5 minutes, by which time the exhaust was almost clear, and the engine would be running fairly smoothly. Then you'd simultaneously (using all three of your hands) switch off the spark, switch the fuel over to diesel, and pull the compression lever to high. The engine would go from that fairly smooth sound, to a dreadful slow chug, and the most vile thick black filth would spew out of the exhaust pipe. That would very slowly clear up, and after another five minutes the tractor would be ready to work.

    Of course there was no cab, just the bare metal seat mounted on a kind of leaf spring, though its shape was actually not uncomfortable. And there was no power steering, so guiding it in a more or less straight line diagonally across the plow furrows (discing a plowed field) was torture.

    I was glad when the farmer retired that tractor. If I know farmers, it's still sitting out there behind the shelter belt. I'm glad I had a chance to drive it though. Not many city-born boys can say they've disced a plowed field with a Super WD-4 gas-diesel tractor.
     
  5. ksstathead

    ksstathead Active Member

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    I think McCormick made our WD-6, which was diesel and still sits along the fencerow with other rusting metal. Wonder if the WD-4 was also McCormick? Drove the WD-6 before I was big enough to reach the clutch. Had to wedge my rear against the front of the seat (leaf spring, no cushion as you describe).

    Ah, the memories. Grinding feed with a belt driven grinder. About 1/2 turn of play in the steering. Geesh.
     
  6. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    A very faint voice was whispering Allis, but 35 years is a long time and I could well be mistaken about that. This one didn't have a half-turn of play in the steering wheel, but it was pretty loose. Maybe a quarter turn?

    I cannot honestly say I "enjoyed" farm work, but it was in the open air, which to me was a lot better than an indoor job, even though I got minimum wage. And I liked the idea of working on a farm rather than in an office. And the bank would not hire me. :(
     
  7. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    I used to drive a bulldozer that was gas start / diesel run. Those engines were fairly common a number of years ago (a LARGE number of years ago, but who's counting?).

    Tom
     
  8. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    How about those old John Deere 2 cylinder diesels that needed a V-4 "putter" gasoline motor to start it up? You'd fire up the little V-4, firewall it, then move the lever to engage the flywheel.

    CHUG .... CHUG ..... CHUGG big puff of black smoke, and hopefully she fired right up

    Something just occurred to me: some of us on the forum are REALLY showing our age!
     
  9. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    Yes those engines were very common back in the day. Im a IH/Case IH person for the most part (more of a fendt person to be honest).

    Allis Chalmers did make WD tractors, but I dont know much about allis'

    IH also had tractors that started on gas and ran on diesel, my neighbor collects old IH tractors and has about 25 full restored old IH and old McCormick tractors. Back in the say diesels didn't like to start. Old CAT bulldozers had pony motors that were bigger than some car engines of today.

    Newer diesels do start fairly well, most here are familiar with the TDI which in my opinion is a very cold blooded motor. I know my 2000 will start when below zero but my moms 06 struggles.

    Our somewhat older tractors will start right up even if its 30 below, they will run pretty rough for awhile but they will start. Our newer tractors dont like the cold as much. Our newest tractors however start fairly well in the cold. Its kind of interesting.

    Our next tractor we will be purchasing is a Fendt which is a far cry from the old tractors many of us know. The Fendt tractors are the most fuel efficient tractors on the market. We are looking at a 933 Fendt and below I will list some of its features.

    First the Engine, it is a Duetz diesel, they used to use MAN engines but the new ones are Duetz. They are very quiet and very easy on fuel. The 933 makes 330hp at the crank at the rated power which is a lot for a large row crop tractor. i used to work at a Fendt dealership, we put a 933 on the PTO dyno and cranked it down. We were able to get a touch over 330hp and over 1,500lbs or torque of course this was not at the rated RPM and was the result of the power bulges programmed into the engine.

    The transmission is a CVT. Fendt Pioneered the CVT some time ago. It is a hydraulic/mechanical CVT. Very simple design. It allows the tractor to operate between 60ft per hour and 35mph in forward and up to 24mph in reverse. It is completely stepless and communicates with the engine 1,000 times per second. Together the engine and transmission can keep the engine at a preset load, which is controlled from the vario terminal, you can select up to a 30% load on the engine though 15% is the best setting ive found.

    The front axle suspension is smoother than a car IMO. It has 1.5' of travel, is fully independent and rides on air. When cornering at high speeds it will actually lean into the corners to provide better stability. Inside the cab the suspension can be lowered or raised manually but over 12mph all manual adjustments are overridden.

    Teh cab is also suspended on 3 air bags which adds to the comfort. Inside the cab you will find simple yet highly complex controls. Up to 8 remote hydraulics are available. The Vario terminal is a work of art, a full color screen that lets you program everything for the tractor including headland management. The Joystick is also an interesting piece. It features stop and go buttons that are programmed to perform multiple things at once through the vario terminal. The joystick also controls many features including forward, reverse and cruise control.

    The seat itself is a work of art. It is a smart seat and communicates with the frame to automatically position itself to provide the best ride. It rides on air and automatically sets to the operators weight. It has three levels of heat and is air conditioned.

    The cab is fully climate controlled as well.

    The brakes on Fendts are full air brakes.

    Fendts are also fully ISOBUS compatable. Which means you simply plug in the isobus connector from your implement into the tractor and the entire implement can be controlled Via the vario terminal.

    An option on the Fendts is the reverse station where all of the controls can fold up, and spin around to provide operation in reverse.

    Another neat thing is the color options on Fendt, one thing no manufacturer besides VALTRA does. The colors for Fendts include, Fendt Green, Fir Green, Black Cherry, Black, and Blue Metallic. There is also a Chrome option available.

    The price for a 933 Fendt is high at about $230,000 but it is worth every penny. I can go into much more detail about the Fendt tractors but for now I will leave it at that.
     
  10. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    many of them do not directly imply that they want farms shut down, but the laws and regulations they are proposing/voting for will shut down farmers eventually.

    One thing they do forget is that, though it is hard to see and remember, we do still have to feed the world.

    Its not like other industrys, we can live without TVs and iPods but food is one thing we cannot so without. Can't Americans just grow their own food?? I would like to see many of them try, most americans couldnt keep a cow alive for a week.

    One thing for many people to remember when voting against farms and such is that they can be held responsible.

    Here is a local story.

    A farmer was proposing a 5,000 cow dairy farm. It was approved, so he began construction and put up all of the corn silage he needed. Shortly before he was going to populate the farm, somebody found a way through the legal system that the case was not handled correctly and sued the farm saying that it would contaminate all of the local wells without any scientific backing. Over 200 local members signed on against the farmer. This farmer is one of the biggest dairyman in the country, he has a lot of equity behind him. He countersued the people against him for his losses that would result from his farm having to be removed which would be millions of dollars. It bounced from court to court but eventually was dropped when all of the people opposing his farm found out that they would be liable and required to pay him if they lost in court. With nothing to back their case they wanted to drop all charges. I believe the farmer agreed and everything was dropped but I didnt hear the final outcome.

    Its funny how everybody is quick to reject something until it affects their own wallet.

    Its kind of like the people who want renewable energy but when a site is proposed for renewable energy nobody wants it in their back yard and they quickly oppose it.
     
  11. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    jayman

    As for the digesters, there are a lot of resources that can be tapped to deal with manure. Time will tell what happens, the thing I hate that seems to interfere with everything is politics.

    As for your friends semi. I will agree that mechanics these days are not every smart. If it doesnt show up on the scan tool they say no issue. If it does show up on the scan tool they just replace parts and dont fix parts.

    My first step is the scan tool. I look to see what codes are there and the freeze frame that was taken. Id say a good 80% of codes are just flukes and mean nothing. If somebody asks me about a code I tell them to clear it and see if it comes back, if it does then you have a problem.

    I Recently rebuilt an allison for a duramax truck and when reinstalled in the truck it wouldnt shift, no codes not errors no nothing it just wouldnt shift. I tried everything I knew but nothing would get it to move. So i tore it back down and found the bellhousing wasnt seated fully, more diagnostics and it was discovered that the P2 planetary spacer was binding. A few trimmings to it and the bellhousing sat flush. The issue was the the pressure was leaking past due to the bellhousing not seating right. A scan tool will not tell you this.
     
  12. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I have no doubt about that. The Europeans place far higher value on quality, performance, and efficiency. Our CaseIH, John Deere, and New Holland tractors are downright primitive in comparison

    Of course. Ask the average Canadian or American where their food comes from, the reply is usually "Safeway" or whatever store they frequent

    :rolleyes:

    Oy

    A very poor way to approach a problem. Naturally, this saves the manufacturer a lot of problems, they can claim a given piece of equipment is "reliable" when point of fact, it is not

    The operator has learned to just live with the problems. If the code scanner claims everything is okey-dokey, then the "problem" is obviously a figment of the operator's imagination

    Then magically, off warranty, they find the source of the problem and ask $4,600 to fix it. Yeah, right!

    No, the scan tool is useless in such a scenario. It takes good old fashioned ability and skill

    When a Prius has a glitch, that is NOT evident in codes, it can be very troubling. I would have to say the biggest knock against Toyota is the sucky nature of most of their dealerships. I don't mean just those that rip you off during the purchase

    If you have a sucky dealership with incompetent/dishonest service people, pray to whatever god you believe in that your Toyota will never require more than basic stuff that you can do yourself: fluid changes, filters, etc

    Because if you have problems, and a sucky dealership, you are screwed. I'm lucky enough to live within 10 minutes of a fairly honest dealership, with reasonably competent service folks
     
  13. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I have experience with both MAN and Deutz, in stationary power generation particularly at oilfield sites. MAN is highly respected, and world class. Their offerings range from semi truck motors up to ocean freighter engines

    The only Deutz motors I have been around have been air cooled. Although air cooled motors can be hard on oil - the proper oil is very essential - they offer a lot of advantages too. No cooling system maintenance, no leaky water pumps, etc. Just make sure the cooling fins are kept clean

    I'm unsure if Deutz still makes air cooled diesel engines. Obviously the emissions will be a lot higher with an air cooled motor
     
  14. durallymax

    durallymax Member

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    No the engine is not air cooled it's a new common rail design. Very good motor so far.

    Agci was the first to put SCR on their tractors. I'm sure the Fendts will have it before long.
     
  15. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    The only Deutz motors I have seen were the air cooled variety. They are exceptionally reliable and long-lasting
     
  16. DamselDiver

    DamselDiver New Member

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    I've worked on large marine diesels for 20 plus years. The largest of which was B&W with 46,000 Shaft HP. The Engine was a 2 stroke with a single exhaust valve. This engine had a 90cm bore and a 2.0 meter stroke. At peak the boost was just under 2 bar (30psig). This engine ran on the equivalent of #6 fuel oil with a waste heat economizer to generate steam for auxiliary systems. This engine was also direct drive, direct reversing with a max speed of 125 rpm and 25 Kts. The 700 ft cargo vessel carried 39,000 tons of cargo, did 25 Kts/hr (Almost 30mph) at peak load and could cruise around the world without refueling. The biggest marine diesel engines in the world today are Large slow speed diesel engines and exceed 100,000 SHP with over 3 bar (45psig) of boost that run in excess of 30 Kts/hr.

    We often stood inside the cylinders and intake and exhaust manifold during maintenance. The reliability of these engines over millions of hours of run time is well documented. In fact these engines are so reliable that Steam, smaller 4 stroke diesels, Gas Turbine and any other propulsion system you could think of has been displaced by the large 2 stroke marine diesel engine.

    There has been some inroads recently of hybrid type Gas Turbine Electric, Diesel Electric and Steam Electric in specialty marine applications but it will be many years before the Large Slow Speed Direct Drive Diesel plant is displaced in commercial applications by competing technologies.

    The reason this type of engine is so prevalent in commercial marine applications is that the economics can not be beaten by any competing technology. Installation, operating costs, maintenance and fuel cost are all lower than any plant for similar service.

    Cheers
    Cheryl
     
  17. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    A minor correction to avoid confusing people: The correct expression is "25 Kt", not Kts/hr. The term knots refers to Nautical Miles Per Hour, so time is already part of the expression. Knots/hr would be acceleration. 25 Kt rounds to 29 mph.

    Tom
     
  18. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Once the carrier gets beyond coastal waters, no one really cares, but I remember once reading an article that the busier ports have raised questions about main engine emissions of NO{x} and particulates.

    Is this a real concern or issue, especially for ports like Amsterdam where the prevailing winds would blow the emissions over the port and landmass before dilution?

    Thanks,
    Bob Wilson
     
  19. Politburo

    Politburo Active Member

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    It is a real concern and the IMO just released the control area for North American waters. Fuel must be <1%S in this area starting in 2012.

    Ocean-going Vessels | US EPA

    ETA: Dilution doesn't really change anything for sulfur emissions. Recall that the NE acid rain problems were caused mainly by plants in the midwest. (this was solved through cap-and-trade)

    This regulation wouldn't affect NOx, but the main concern from ocean-going vessels at port is SO2 and particulates.
     
  20. DamselDiver

    DamselDiver New Member

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    Many ports in the world have stringent emission requirements that require the vessel operators to burn fuels with extremely low sulphur content or have stack scrubbers in place during port operation to keep SOx emissions low. In fact the european area is called SECA (SOx Emission Control Area). The west coast of the USA is also very restrictive. California was a big player in ushering in local clean air regulations.

    Cheers
    Cheryl