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Don Stauffer wrote:
Steve wrote: Sport Pilot wrote: Diesel fuel is not conducive to high speed running. Nor is a long injection period through much of the expansion phase. Yes you can boost the turbocharger and the other things, but an Otto cycle engine will respond with even higher speeds. Parts failure from speed is not a problem with diesel engines, the rotating parts have to be bigger than an otto engine because of the higher compression, yet the otto engine will turn higer RPM's with smaller parts. All of the above is true in the common practice of diesel design, but none of it is necessarily true. There is nothing FUNDAMENTAL that limits a diesel to low-RPM designs only. One can build a screaming high-RPM diesel with light-weight rotating parts, but one would have to ask "why?" Gasoline engines are made high-revving in order to increase power output from a small package, but diesels can develop a lot more low-RPM torque through high boost because they don't detonate when "lugged," so there's no NEED to make them scream. If you need more power, don't spin them faster, just boost them harder. High RPM is an aggravation, not an advantage (no matter what Honda VTEC drivers think...). I would assume that use of hydrogen as a fuel would allow very high rpm in a Diesel. But no one has come up with a completely satisfactory way to do direct injection with a gaseous fuel, which is the same problem diesels that run on natural gas face. NG diesels are interesting beasts. They actually mix the gas with the intake air and compress it like a spark-ignition engine would, setting up the possibility of detonation, but since NG is has a very high relative "octane" rating, it doesn't ignite until a *tiny* shot of diesel is injected to initiate combustion. They do have to operate at somewhat lower compression than a straight diesel, but its still in the neighborhood of 14:1 or 15:1 which is much higher than you can achieve with gasoline, at least on any fuel short of leaded aviation racing fuel that is brewed up in ridiculously small (and expensive) quantities for the Reno air racers. |
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