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On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote:
LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. -robert |
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On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:03:23 -0000, "Robert M. Gary"
wrote in . com: On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. True. But the concept seems valid for piston aircraft. What bothers me, is the potential for additional strain on the engine when converted to diesel operation. |
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Larry Dighera wrote:
On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:03:23 -0000, "Robert M. Gary" wrote in . com: On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. True. But the concept seems valid for piston aircraft. What bothers me, is the potential for additional strain on the engine when converted to diesel operation. As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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Scott Skylane wrote:
wrote: As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? Jim, Yeah, GM's very first line of passenger car diesels were merely converted small block Chevys. It didn't work so well. But, I would hope that in the ensuing decades some new technologies have developed which might make this a more feasable option. AFAIK the only way to make a reliable diesel engine is to design it to take the stress of a diesel from the start and gas engines aren't. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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Don Tuite wrote:
On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 19:45:00 GMT, wrote: Scott Skylane wrote: wrote: As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? Jim, Yeah, GM's very first line of passenger car diesels were merely converted small block Chevys. It didn't work so well. But, I would hope that in the ensuing decades some new technologies have developed which might make this a more feasable option. AFAIK the only way to make a reliable diesel engine is to design it to take the stress of a diesel from the start and gas engines aren't. Maybe it's simply about preheating the fuel and retarding the spark. People keep saying our engines are "just tractor engines." Retarding the spark on a diesel? The problem is gas engines go bang and diesel engines go BANG!!!. This puts greater stress on the engine parts which isn't a problem if you designed for that stress level in the first place. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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wrote:
Larry Dighera wrote: On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:03:23 -0000, "Robert M. Gary" wrote in . com: On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. True. But the concept seems valid for piston aircraft. What bothers me, is the potential for additional strain on the engine when converted to diesel operation. As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? The Olds 350. To the best of my knowledge, *every* auto manufacturer that tried a simple gas to diesel conversion failed the first iteration and ****ed off a bunch of customers. My own personal experience centered around the VW Rabbit diesel. In all fairness, both Olds and VW both got it right after a couple of years. |
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Jim Stewart wrote:
wrote: Larry Dighera wrote: On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:03:23 -0000, "Robert M. Gary" wrote in . com: On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archive...ll.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. True. But the concept seems valid for piston aircraft. What bothers me, is the potential for additional strain on the engine when converted to diesel operation. As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? The Olds 350. To the best of my knowledge, *every* auto manufacturer that tried a simple gas to diesel conversion failed the first iteration and ****ed off a bunch of customers. My own personal experience centered around the VW Rabbit diesel. In all fairness, both Olds and VW both got it right after a couple of years. Yeah, after redesigning the engines as diesels. The experience has been that everyone that tries to convert a gas engine to diesel winds up with a blown engine. If you start with a diesel design you have a working engine. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
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wrote:
Larry Dighera wrote: On Thu, 26 Jul 2007 18:03:23 -0000, "Robert M. Gary" wrote in . com: On Jul 26, 10:33 am, Larry Dighera wrote: LINDBERGH FOUNDATION GRANT GOES TO ENGINE INNOVATOR (http://www.avweb.com/eletter/archives/avflash/919- full.html#195734) Pilots of older aircraft worry about the future availability of 100LL avgas, Man this guy doesn't know much about aviation. New planes use 100LL too. True. But the concept seems valid for piston aircraft. What bothers me, is the potential for additional strain on the engine when converted to diesel operation. As it should for anyone contemplating doing it. Wasn't it GM a couple of decades back that had the big fiasco of blown engines when they tried to convert their existing gas engines to diesel? Yes it was and it probably set auto-diesels back 10 years. |
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