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Injection Limiter adjustment
I've got a Yanmar 2gm20 that I'm pretty convinced has a problem with
the governor (speed is not well controlled especially when it comes under load). The seemingly easy path is to fiddle with the injection limiter. However, there are a couple of things holding me back. First, they put a wire seal on the adjuster back at the factory. I've had the problem from day one so I suspect that they didn't get the adjustment right, but still I figure they sealed it for a reason. I'm no Japanese scholar but it may even say "Tom, keep your **** hands off this!" So, will really bad things happen if I mess with the limiter? Second, I'm not sure exactly how to go about making the adjustment should I care to. The manual says "if the engine does not accelerate smoothly turn the limiter slightly counter-clockwise." Good, that's my problem. The drawing shows a cap nut, lock nut and injection control shaft. I presume I have to remove the nuts and back the injection control shaft off a fraction. But, the drawing doesn't show a slot or anything on the control shaft to keep it from turning while I move the nuts. Is there some trick to making this work I should know about when I attempt this? It'd be really nice if I could mark things so I could at least get back to the current settings if fiddling doesn't fix things. But how? Thanks! -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 20, 12:10 pm, "Roger Long" wrote:
... I'll explain later. ... Hmm... I have my suspicions on why that might help, but I'll wait 'till later... :) Anyway, thanks for that and the link. I'll check it out. -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Thu, 20 Mar 2008 14:01:05 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: I've got a Yanmar 2gm20 that I'm pretty convinced has a problem with the governor (speed is not well controlled especially when it comes under load). The seemingly easy path is to fiddle with the injection limiter. However, there are a couple of things holding me back. First, they put a wire seal on the adjuster back at the factory. I've had the problem from day one so I suspect that they didn't get the adjustment right, but still I figure they sealed it for a reason. I'm no Japanese scholar but it may even say "Tom, keep your **** hands off this!" So, will really bad things happen if I mess with the limiter? Second, I'm not sure exactly how to go about making the adjustment should I care to. The manual says "if the engine does not accelerate smoothly turn the limiter slightly counter-clockwise." Good, that's my problem. The drawing shows a cap nut, lock nut and injection control shaft. I presume I have to remove the nuts and back the injection control shaft off a fraction. But, the drawing doesn't show a slot or anything on the control shaft to keep it from turning while I move the nuts. Is there some trick to making this work I should know about when I attempt this? It'd be really nice if I could mark things so I could at least get back to the current settings if fiddling doesn't fix things. But how? Thanks! -- Tom. First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. The seals were put on the governor for a reason. It is doubtful that the factory adjusted the governor incorrectly.. I suggest that you first adjust the idle speed to about 900-1000 RPM in neutral and check that the high speed RPM is 3600 RPM in neutral. Once you get these settings made does the engine seem to run normally? If so, try the same settings with the transmission in forward. Your idle speed should be essentially the same but high RPM may be a few hundred RPM lower. If you can't reach full RPM and you have black smoke coming out the exhaust then your prop is too big. If you can't reach full RPM and no black smoke then you may have clogged filters - change them all and try again. If this doesn't cure your problem then frankly (and not to make fun of you) from your questions I would suggest that you would be advised to get a proper mechanic to have a look at things. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 20, 5:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. What? It doesn't mention anything like that in the manual (and the manual does have many warnings in it). It suggests that I might get black smoke if I overdo it and low torque if I underdo it. Expode? Really? I suggest that you first adjust the idle speed to about 900-1000 RPM in neutral and check that the high speed RPM is 3600 RPM in neutral. Yes. These are correct in the no-load condition. ... you may have clogged filters - change them all and try again. It is not a filter problem. If this doesn't cure your problem then frankly (and not to make fun of you) from your questions I would suggest that you would be advised to get a proper mechanic to have a look at things. No problem. I'm not proud, but I've done this to no avail. I've had four mechanics go over it and none of them have been able to fix the problem. The last time I hauled the boat I pulled the motor and sent it to the dealer and they couldn't fix it. If you can recommend a competent mechanic who will come down to my boat here in Hawaii, great. The timing is good, the injectors are good, the fuel system is good as far as the injector pump. I could pull the injector pump off and take it to a shop for a rebuild, but that involves hauling the boat as there's no way to do that without pulling the engine and no space to do that without pulling the sail-drive and that causes the boat to sink if you do it in the water... It is something I can work around (I've been doing so for years), but it annoys me. Are you sure I'm going to blow up the engine if I mess with the limiter? It's so tempting and the manual certainly suggests that it is a reasonable place to look for the problem, but blowing up is a bit too much down side for me... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 20, 5:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. Just to make sure we're on the same page, I'm not planning on messing with the no-load maximum speed limiter. That's just fine and the manual says, more or less, don't mess. I'm looking at the injection limiter which is also sealed but which shouldn't change the ultimate rpms and which the manual provides a method for adjusting... No, no, don't hold back, I can take it :) Really, thanks for the input. -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On 2008-03-20 23:55:17 -0400, Bruce in Bangkok said:
First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. The seals were put on the governor for a reason. It is doubtful that the factory adjusted the governor incorrectly.. I suggest that you first adjust the idle speed to about 900-1000 RPM in neutral and check that the high speed RPM is 3600 RPM in neutral. Once you get these settings made does the engine seem to run normally? If so, try the same settings with the transmission in forward. Your idle speed should be essentially the same but high RPM may be a few hundred RPM lower. If you can't reach full RPM and you have black smoke coming out the exhaust then your prop is too big. If you can't reach full RPM and no black smoke then you may have clogged filters - change them all and try again. If this doesn't cure your problem then frankly (and not to make fun of you) from your questions I would suggest that you would be advised to get a proper mechanic to have a look at things. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) I usually agree with you, and mostly agree with what I see as your intentions, but you got some things wrong in my hardly ever humble opinion.... The factory could well have screwed things up. Their employees have little if no investment, though my observation has been that they usually do at least a decent job. Minimum idle speed on our 2GM20F is set to a bit under 600. We were warned to long-term idle/charge at about 1200, so that amounts to our usual idle. With a properly pitched prop, there is no way we can pull full RPMs at the dock in forward or reverse. We blow incredible black billows of smoke trying. When we open the throttle to full while freely moving, we push past hull speed, show the max RPMs we pitched for and blow a bit of black smoke. That IMHO is about the way is should be. -- Jere Lull Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD Xan's pages: http://web.mac.com/jerelull/iWeb/Xan/ Our BVI trips & tips: http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Thu, 20 Mar 2008 21:44:31 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Mar 20, 5:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. What? It doesn't mention anything like that in the manual (and the manual does have many warnings in it). It suggests that I might get black smoke if I overdo it and low torque if I underdo it. Expode? Really? If you were to tinker with the governor sufficiently it could cause the engine to "run away", i.e., to run at continuously increasing RPM until something (probably a connecting rod) fails, usually knocking holes in the engine and firing parts around the boat. I don't mean to imply that it WILL happen but if you aren't aware that it CAN happen then perhaps you shouldn't be "fixing" it. I suggest that you first adjust the idle speed to about 900-1000 RPM in neutral and check that the high speed RPM is 3600 RPM in neutral. Yes. These are correct in the no-load condition. ... you may have clogged filters - change them all and try again. It is not a filter problem. If this doesn't cure your problem then frankly (and not to make fun of you) from your questions I would suggest that you would be advised to get a proper mechanic to have a look at things. No problem. I'm not proud, but I've done this to no avail. I've had four mechanics go over it and none of them have been able to fix the problem. The last time I hauled the boat I pulled the motor and sent it to the dealer and they couldn't fix it. If you can recommend a competent mechanic who will come down to my boat here in Hawaii, great. Nope! You bring your boat to me here in Thailand :-) The timing is good, the injectors are good, the fuel system is good as far as the injector pump. I could pull the injector pump off and take it to a shop for a rebuild, but that involves hauling the boat as there's no way to do that without pulling the engine and no space to do that without pulling the sail-drive and that causes the boat to sink if you do it in the water... It is something I can work around (I've been doing so for years), but it annoys me. Are you sure I'm going to blow up the engine if I mess with the limiter? It's so tempting and the manual certainly suggests that it is a reasonable place to look for the problem, but blowing up is a bit too much down side for me... -- Tom. First of all, the word "limiter" is a bit confusing. It may be a "Yanmar" word but it is not a word normally associated with diesel engines except in the sense of a RPM limiter which usually implies a device to limit the maximum RPM - a safety devise in other words - which is not a part that Yanmar uses on the 2GM20. A diesel engine usually has two owner adjustable settings. The high and low RPM settings, usually screw adjustments acting on the fuel lever. If this is what you are referring to then it is all right to adjust them but you seem to be saying that both high and low RPM is correct. Further, adjusting the stops for the fuel lever won't effect anything except the RPM settings because there is no direct connection between the fuel lever and the injection pump. It only compresses a spring that works against the governor. Can you give a better description of the problem? For example, does the engine accelerate normally when in neutral? Does the engine run rough while accelerating? Does it only happen with the engine in forward or reverse? Does the engine vibrate more then normal when it is doing whatever it is doing? Are you jamming the throttle from idle to wide open very rapidly? Upon acceleration does the engine momentarily over speed and then settle back to the selected RPM? Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 20, 9:46 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
... First of all, the word "limiter" is a bit confusing. It may be a "Yanmar" word but it is not a word normally associated with diesel engines except in the sense of a RPM limiter which usually implies a device to limit the maximum RPM - a safety devise in other words - which is not a part that Yanmar uses on the 2GM20. Well, I'm not even to the point where I can pretend to be clued in here so I'm just using the terminology out of the manual. The governor has three externally adjustable controls: "Injection Limiter", "no-load maximum speed limiter", and "idling adjuster". I'm familiar with the idling adjuster and it's trivial to work with. The no-load maximum speed limiter is sealed at the factory and seems to be correct. So, I'm thinking of messing with the injection limiter. It is essentially the end stop for the fuel control lever on the injection pump and limits the total amount of fuel that the governor can demand. The manual says " if the engine does not accelerate smoothly (ie. speed is not well controlled), turn the limiter slightly counter-clockwise. Note: if it is turned back too much, it will produce exhaust smoke." Black smoke I can deal with. Thrown rods would suck. Since they do seal the injection limiter at the factory I'm taking your warning seriously, but it isn't what I want to hear... Further, adjusting the stops for the fuel lever won't effect anything except the RPM settings because there is no direct connection between the fuel lever and the injection pump. It only compresses a spring that works against the governor. Right, the part I'm looking at prohibits the governor from opening the fuel pump beyond a certain point (a slightly fuzzy point as it has a spring in it too). It is not a speed control at all. Can you give a better description of the problem? For example, does the engine accelerate normally when in neutral? Generally, yes, though when the high output alternator kicks with a big load the engine falls back to idle speed. Does the engine run rough while accelerating? No, it runs very smoothly. Does it only happen with the engine in forward or reverse? Both and neutral. Does the engine vibrate more then normal when it is doing whatever it is doing? No. Are you jamming the throttle from idle to wide open very rapidly? No, and if demand comes onto the engine when it is stable in high idle it will loose rpms. Upon acceleration does the engine momentarily over speed and then settle back to the selected RPM? No, never. Indeed, it tends to not reach speed so that I have to over throttle a bit to get the desired rpms and then back down to keep them steady. It is not lash in the morse cable. The problem seems most marked when the motor is cold, but as the batteries demand drops I'm asking the engine to produce less torque after it has run for a while and even when the batteries are topped off it still tends not to reach the demanded rpms. I have noticed that this engine uses less fuel than its counterpart when running at speed even when the nominal rpms are even. I am certainly confused. But like I say I've had the pros go over it and they've been unable to fix it. We've gone over the fuel system multiple times except that I haven't had the injection pump out and I haven't messed with the injection limiter. It may be that the injection pump is mis-shimmed and thus the timing is out but getting the pump off is a major PIA with this installation. The limiter I can get at so it tempts me... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Thu, 20 Mar 2008 22:22:42 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Mar 20, 5:55 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. Just to make sure we're on the same page, I'm not planning on messing with the no-load maximum speed limiter. That's just fine and the manual says, more or less, don't mess. I'm looking at the injection limiter which is also sealed but which shouldn't change the ultimate rpms and which the manual provides a method for adjusting... No, no, don't hold back, I can take it :) Really, thanks for the input. -- Tom. I finally located a 2GM20 manual. downloaded it from http://motoren.ath.cx/menus/yanmar.html and "limiter" IS a "anmar"word. The Manual quite emphatically states that the high speed adjustment and the Fuel Injection Limiter should not be adjusted and will void the guarantee if the seal is broken. The screw labeled "No Load Maximum Speed Limiter" adjusts the linkage to adjust the high RPM. The "Fuel injection Limiter" acts as a stop to limit the maximum movement of the fork that moves the fuel rack that determines how much fuel the individual injection pumps inject. If, for example, the engine is idling and you jam the throttle full open the Speed Control Lever applies force to the Governor Spring which forces the Governor Lever to pull the rack (in the injection pump) to the high fuel position and feeding more fuel to the engine which causes the engine to accelerate. When the engine RPM reaches the speed dictated by the tension of the Governor Spring the Governor Weights swing outward and force the Governor Lever back against the force of the Governor Spring to maintain the RPM selected by the position of the Fuel Control Lever acting through the Governor Spring. However, prior to the Governor Weights opening there is nothing to resist the pull of the Governor Spring so the "Fuel Injection Limiter" comes into play and acts as a stop to limit maximum movement of the Governor Lever before the engine accelerates to a speed sufficient to actuate the Governor Weights. I'm not sure whether the Fuel Injection Limiter has a spring loaded plunger in it or not. Detroit Diesel engines had a similar device but in their case it was to limit surge at idle. Backing the Fuel Injection Limiter out will increase amount of fuel during acceleration before the Governor Weights have a chance to react and thus the chance of over revving the engine is increased. Screwing it in will reduce the amount of fuel and the engine will accelerate slower then normal. I'm certainly not going to recommend that you violate the manufacturer's recommendations but if you are committed then hold the safety wired nut and remove the acorn nut. The screw should have a slot so it can be adjusted with a screw driver, if not scratch a line on the screw so you can tell how far you have turned it. First of all, with the boat securely tied to the dock (you don't want to be charging all over the ocean while you are trying to adjust the engine) try moving the throttle rapidly from idle to about half throttle, with the transmission in neutral. You should get a puff of black smoke and the engine should smoothly accelerate to whatever speed your throttle is set to. Backing the Fuel Injection Limiter out will increase the amount of fuel available for acceleration and therefore a bigger puff of black smoke. Turning the screw in will reduce the amount of fuel available for acceleration and reduce the puff of black smoke. A normally operating diesel engine always has a little black smoke when it accelerates. If you reach a point that the engine accelerates to a higher RPM and then settles back to a lower speed you have gone too far. Screw the Fuel Injection Limiter back in a bit. I would suggest moving the screw not more then a quarter turn at a time. Once things seem to work correctly try the same thing with the transmission in gear and make any necessary adjustment. Once you have the engine running properly when you accelerate to half throttle try idle to full throttle (carefully). Once you have the idle to full throttle acceleration adjusted both in neutral and in gear you should have the engine correctly adjusted. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Fri, 21 Mar 2008 07:25:49 GMT, Jere Lull wrote:
On 2008-03-20 23:55:17 -0400, Bruce in Bangkok said: First, yes, fiddling with the governor can cause the engine to explode. The seals were put on the governor for a reason. It is doubtful that the factory adjusted the governor incorrectly.. I suggest that you first adjust the idle speed to about 900-1000 RPM in neutral and check that the high speed RPM is 3600 RPM in neutral. Once you get these settings made does the engine seem to run normally? If so, try the same settings with the transmission in forward. Your idle speed should be essentially the same but high RPM may be a few hundred RPM lower. If you can't reach full RPM and you have black smoke coming out the exhaust then your prop is too big. If you can't reach full RPM and no black smoke then you may have clogged filters - change them all and try again. If this doesn't cure your problem then frankly (and not to make fun of you) from your questions I would suggest that you would be advised to get a proper mechanic to have a look at things. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) I usually agree with you, and mostly agree with what I see as your intentions, but you got some things wrong in my hardly ever humble opinion.... The factory could well have screwed things up. Their employees have little if no investment, though my observation has been that they usually do at least a decent job. Most of the Japanese factories are so automated or use so many jigs and fixtures that human error is reduced to a minimum. Not to say it never happens but I think it is rare. Minimum idle speed on our 2GM20F is set to a bit under 600. We were warned to long-term idle/charge at about 1200, so that amounts to our usual idle. I know that.. Re read what I wrote. I wanted him to set the idle high enough that low idle speed wouldn't be a factor. If the thing ran well with the higher idle it would be easy to reset that later. I probably should have elaborated on that in the original post. With a properly pitched prop, there is no way we can pull full RPMs at the dock in forward or reverse. We blow incredible black billows of smoke trying. Again, I should have been more detailed. If he gets black smoke at full throttle while under way the prop is too big. I kow that some people deliberately over prop with the idea that they get better fuel economy because they are running at a lower RPM but I didn't want to get into all that. When we open the throttle to full while freely moving, we push past hull speed, show the max RPMs we pitched for and blow a bit of black smoke. That IMHO is about the way is should be. Probably in real life that is about the best you can do. theoretically you should have no black smoke. Big stationary engines are tuned that way, but with a boat there are just too many variables. going up hill or down; how dirty is the bottom; full tanks or empty; wind behind or before. I made a later post after finally finding a service manual. I had a 2GM20 at one time and even after running it for a couple of years I had no idea that it was as sophisticated as it is(for a little engine, that is). Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Fri, 21 Mar 2008 07:51:59 -0400, "Roger Long"
wrote: You say that mechanics have not been able to fix the problem. Are you sure they did not try these adjustments? I'm beginning to suspect that you have a problem inside the governor itself, corrosion, debris, slight manufacturing defect or tolerance drift is making it sluggish to react. The weights stick slightly and then let go. Increasing the rate at which fuel flow can be increased during accelleration might compensate but, if this is the case, could lead to further instability because of "overshoot" when the governor weights unstick. It also sounds like you might have too large an alternator. Prop demand won't, or shouldn't, change suddenly but a sudden load like a large alternator on a small engine like this may simply be outside the design envelope of the fuel control system. Actually, it is probably right on the edge so one engine is OK and the other has problems. This whole installation was about 30 feet long so it was pretty impressive. Here's my governor sea story: I worked on the repowering of a large oceanographic vessel. We installed two EMD engines (same as in railroad locomotives) that had been in a government warehouse since about WWII. Each gearbox had a shaft running back to DC drive motors taken out of an older diesel electric vessel and converted into generators to run the ship's bow thruster. These motors were about 5 feet in diameter and I put a big flexible coupling on the front of the generators that was like half of a car tire bolted to a big metal disc. When we first fired up the engines, one ran fine. The other began surging and lunging back and forth as soon as the generator was clutched in with such violence that we could see the generator beds and ship structure flex. It was astounding and alarming during the second or two it took to grab the PTO handle back into OFF. The whole installation was about 30 feet long so it was pretty impressive. Both were identical so it was a real mystery. They called in an EMD expert from Texas who flew up. We stated up the engine, clutched it in, watched the lunging for 2 seconds and shut down. The expert hopped up on the engine, took the cover off the governor and said, "Get me a drill with a 3/16" bit." He drilled a hole in something, fiddled around for about 10 seconds, put the top back on, and started to leave. We asked if he wanted to see it run and he said, no, he knew it would work. It did. He was on the ship for about 20 minutes. It turned out that one engine had a marine governor and the other a railroad locomotive governor. The railroad governor had a second set of weights that, when sudden load was put on the engine, would rapidly increase the fuel flow. This was so the engine wouldn't bog down when the slack came out of the couplers of the railroad cars. When we clutched in the PTO, the rubber tire flex coupling would wind up as. The load would cause the governor to goose the engine and the timing was such that the unwinding of the flex coupling would exactly match up with the time it took for the governor to react. The impulse went back and forth magnifying each time like a huge mechanical laser. All the fellow from Texas did was drill a hole in the two discs that held the two sets of weights and insert a pin to disable the goosing function. You flew him in from Texas? Good Lord I must be getting old. EMD guys used to be all over the place. A very common engine at one time, We had a whole generator house full of them at one time in Irian Jaya. Then the company decided to modernize and sold all the old engines and replaced them with turbines. do you have any idea how fast the shut downs work on a turbine? Once they got the new plant set up the entire site used to go down several times a day. One turbine would hiccup and go off line. The remaining units would sense an overload and Bam they would all shut down. That story makes me wonder, do any of the smaller commercial vessels use turbines? Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 21, 1:51 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
You say that mechanics have not been able to fix the problem. Are you sure they did not try these adjustments? Well, the last folks had the engine for over a month and might have fiddled with it, but I don' think they did. 100% or respondents say "fuel restriction or air in fuel" when I describe the problem, but so far the ones who've attempted to fix it have failed. All the obvious things have been done multiple times. I'm beginning to suspect that you have a problem inside the governor itself, corrosion, debris, slight manufacturing defect or tolerance drift is making it sluggish to react. Yes, that could be the case. As Bruce has pointed out these are well made engines and it would be a rare affliction, but basically all that's left unchecked is the governor and its adjustments and the injection pump. Also, the fact that there seems to be a change when the engine warms up seems suggest to me that there might be a change in tolerances w/in the gov mechanism itself... And, makes the injection limiter a less likely culprit. The injection limiter is a bit of a hail Mary, but seems easy... It also sounds like you might have too large an alternator. In practice there's no doubt that the alternator is too large for that engine. But, the identical machine works on the left side... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 21, 12:41 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
The Manual quite emphatically states that the high speed adjustment and the Fuel Injection Limiter should not be adjusted and will void the guarantee if the seal is broken. Oddly enough my manual doesn't say that for the injection limiter but does for the no-load... But I'm sure you're right, why else would they seal it? I'm not sure whether the Fuel Injection Limiter has a spring loaded plunger in it or not. Detroit Diesel engines had a similar device but in their case it was to limit surge at idle. Yes, the manual shows a spring in it (though the manual isn't always a perfect indicator of what is actually installed). .. The screw should have a slot so it can be adjusted with a screw driver, if not scratch a line on the screw so you can tell how far you have turned it. Right, in practice the nuts and washers are all tight against each other and no part of the shaft is showing. The adjuster is a hollow threaded rod with a spring inside of it. The slot on the top of the rod is the spring retention screw. Not sure if turning it ccw will undo it or the control shaft. Assuming nothing moves when I take the acorn I suppose I could make a mark on the shaft w/respect to the lock nut. Thanks! -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 21, 9:53 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
You might try swapping the alternators (and voltage regulators if separate) from side to side. It could be that the governors are right on the edge of not being able to cope with the electric loads and there is a difference in how the alternators are functioning. That's an interesting thought. Both are controlled by my Ample Power controller and share the same loads (at least in theory). The port engine seem quite cheerful with its load (good throttle response, no smoke, smooth running). The starboard engine loses power but doesn't smoke or run rough when asked to do the same task. I have had the stb alternator rebuilt and that didn't change anything. Just out of curiosity, how many hours on these engines? 1,338.5 port and 1,354.8 stb. -- Tom. |
Injectiors
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Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 21, 1:40 pm, "Roger Long" wrote:
... Everything in the QM, and I strongly suspect on your GM as well, depends on balances of spring pressure and there are numerous points where a bit of corrosion, burr left over from manufacturing, etc. could create exactly the symptoms you describe. Yes that sounds like the same beast. I've sent you a few scans. Hope they aren't to horrible. You probably need to have the back cover taken off this engine and everything in the governor system checked out. It doesn't look like rocket science. Yes, but it is a PIA. Actually, I was just looking at the injector pump and I think I can get it out of there (I'll have to rescue the shims by feel, but... So, I might pull it and have it over to the shop before I have the front of the engine off. Still, turning one little screw sounds soooo much easier... :) Cheers, -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Fri, 21 Mar 2008 11:16:02 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Mar 21, 12:41 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: The Manual quite emphatically states that the high speed adjustment and the Fuel Injection Limiter should not be adjusted and will void the guarantee if the seal is broken. Oddly enough my manual doesn't say that for the injection limiter but does for the no-load... But I'm sure you're right, why else would they seal it? I'm not sure whether the Fuel Injection Limiter has a spring loaded plunger in it or not. Detroit Diesel engines had a similar device but in their case it was to limit surge at idle. Yes, the manual shows a spring in it (though the manual isn't always a perfect indicator of what is actually installed). .. The screw should have a slot so it can be adjusted with a screw driver, if not scratch a line on the screw so you can tell how far you have turned it. Right, in practice the nuts and washers are all tight against each other and no part of the shaft is showing. The adjuster is a hollow threaded rod with a spring inside of it. The slot on the top of the rod is the spring retention screw. Not sure if turning it ccw will undo it or the control shaft. Assuming nothing moves when I take the acorn I suppose I could make a mark on the shaft w/respect to the lock nut. Thanks! -- Tom. Update: When I said to hold the nut when removing the acorn nut I neglected to say"loosen the nut when adjusting the screw". Let us know how it works out. Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 21, 4:44 pm, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
... When I said to hold the nut when removing the acorn nut I neglected to say"loosen the nut when adjusting the screw". ... Thanks, Bruce. I'll certainly report back if I go for it and I don't blow myself up... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Thu, 20 Mar 2008 14:01:05 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: I've got a Yanmar 2gm20 that I'm pretty convinced has a problem with the governor (speed is not well controlled especially when it comes under load). You may get more on-target suggestions if you describe the symptoms more precisely - such as what load, what rpm variations. --Vic |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 2:15 am, Vic Smith wrote:
You may get more on-target suggestions if you describe the symptoms more precisely - such as what load, what rpm variations. Could be. :) But in a way I'm trying to avoid doing that because I've been down that route here and with pros and 100% of people say air in the fuel. For years I've believed them and labored to get the fuel system just so and I've spend a lot of money having the pros work it over, too. It is not a show stopper. I've traveled tens of thousands of miles with it. But, it is a continual annoyance. So, basically the last part that nobody has messed with that could reasonably be causing my problems is the governor. Applying the do the easy stuff first principle I looked at the beast and it has an adjustment the might possibly fix or mask the problem and it looks super easy to do. But, it is factory sealed. So, my question was, in essence, will vengeful samurai descend from heaven to cause me grave bodily harm if I tweak that puppy? So far, I think I've gotten a good solid "maybe" on that. I'm not really asking for a diagnosis of the problem. I pretty much lost faith in them (though they are always amusing and I'm happy to read any that are proffered). -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 2:11 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
Tom, The engine that burns more fuel is the one with the control problem, right? No, the problem engine is using less fuel for the same nominal rpm. ...Turning the adjustment could cause even more problems if so. Yes, there must be a reason they don't want users to mess with it. That could be it. Get an opinion from someone who actually knows but I'll bet a six pack they are going to tell you they need to pull the rear case cover and look at that spring. I'd happily pay for an opinion from "someone who actually knows", but simply asking (and paying) the local Yanmar dealers and recommended independents obviously isn't a good way to get that opinion... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 3:06 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
Say, I just discovered that there is a plate that allows access to the injector limit spring and mechanism on my engine without having to pull the whole rear cover off. Take a look at your engine, I'll bet it has something similar. Yes, it looks like I can remove the idle adjuster assy and get a look in there (well, feel in there really). I like that idea as I should be able to slip a feeler or something between the injection limiter and the crank arm to see that its spring is working and scope out the regulator springs, too. Cool. Monday, though. -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Sat, 22 Mar 2008 12:32:10 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: On Mar 22, 2:15 am, Vic Smith wrote: You may get more on-target suggestions if you describe the symptoms more precisely - such as what load, what rpm variations. Could be. :) But in a way I'm trying to avoid doing that because I've been down that route here and with pros and 100% of people say air in the fuel. For years I've believed them and labored to get the fuel system just so and I've spend a lot of money having the pros work it over, too. It is not a show stopper. I've traveled tens of thousands of miles with it. But, it is a continual annoyance. So, basically the last part that nobody has messed with that could reasonably be causing my problems is the governor. Applying the do the easy stuff first principle I looked at the beast and it has an adjustment the might possibly fix or mask the problem and it looks super easy to do. But, it is factory sealed. So, my question was, in essence, will vengeful samurai descend from heaven to cause me grave bodily harm if I tweak that puppy? So far, I think I've gotten a good solid "maybe" on that. I'm not really asking for a diagnosis of the problem. I pretty much lost faith in them (though they are always amusing and I'm happy to read any that are proffered). Know what you mean. The reason I mentioned that is once in an auto group somebody reported odd but specific symptoms of stalling in his 5 year old supercharged Pontiac. He was getting all kinds of logical - but wrong - advice from technicians. It just so happened that a workmate of mine had that exact car and recently related to me those exact symptoms. His mechanic couldn't solve it and sent it to the Pontiac dealer, who quickly fixed it. This posting activity happened on a weekend and I posted that I would find the solution from my workmate on Monday. But since I ended up not working that Monday the original poster started e-mailing me. I called my workmate to look at his dealer receipt when he went home, and the only part listed was a fuel pump resistor. When I relayed this to the original poster, he went into his garage and had the resistor bypassed and on order within an hour, his problem was gone, and he thanked me heartily. He seemed the type really fond of his car and wanting to always do his own fixing. As much as I've worked on cars, the only time I touched a resistor was on my son's Sony PS1 playstaion. I melted everything into ruination. But the car problem solution was an unusually fortuitous set of events, and usenet worked quite well. Your situation is different of course, and there is a smaller set of Yanmar owners, but there's always a chance. Besides, it makes people feel good to make suggestions, no matter how irrelevant they are (-: --Vic |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 4:02 pm, Vic Smith wrote:
... Besides, it makes people feel good to make suggestions, no matter how irrelevant they are (-: Sorry, I didn't mean to deprive you of you're go. Please, suggest away! :) I'm planning on taking the boat out in the morning anyway, so I'll try and pay particular attention to the motor and report some symptoms for you. Cheers, and Happy Easter, -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 9:05 pm, " wrote:
... I'm planning on taking the boat out in the morning anyway, so I'll try and pay particular attention to the motor and report some symptoms for you. ... Alright, I took the family out for a cruise yesterday and did keep an eye on the engines. I reduced the warm up period to about 10 minutes and the batteries were fully charged when I left the dock. On the run out of the harbor I set both throttles to about 2300 and for the first 5 minutes or so the stb eng would run up to just under the desired rpm and then drop off 200 fairly slowly and then run back up. The full cycle taking about 10 seconds. We set sail and sailed for a couple of hours and then restarted the motors to anchor and throttle response appeared normal. After a couple hours at anchor I motored home (about 4 miles). The engines appeared to run normally. Neither smokes at WOT and both ran up to full rpms (though we were running with a strongish tail wind). I know this isn't going to help my case as it sure sounds like air in the fuel. Still, I'm pretty convinced that's not it. I have spent a lot of time with the fuel system. The filters are new. The day tank is above the engine. There doesn't appear to be any water or growth in the fuel. But, I hope everyone who wants to will feel free to tell me what they think the problem is. Fire away! :) -- Tom PS. And thanks. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
wrote in message ... On Mar 22, 9:05 pm, " wrote: ... I'm planning on taking the boat out in the morning anyway, so I'll try and pay particular attention to the motor and report some symptoms for you. ... Alright, I took the family out for a cruise yesterday and did keep an eye on the engines. I reduced the warm up period to about 10 minutes snipped. Warming up a diesel for 10 minutes is unnecessarily long and does no good. Give them a couple of minutes to make sure everything is working and then leave the dock and get some load on. Prolonged idling from cold causes a lot of wear. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 24, 9:30 am, "Edgar" wrote:
Warming up a diesel for 10 minutes is unnecessarily long and does no good. Give them a couple of minutes to make sure everything is working and then leave the dock and get some load on. Prolonged idling from cold causes a lot of wear. Help me out, how does it cause wear? Sure, I don't know squat about engines but it from book learning and a tiny bit of expericene: Assuming that the oil is of a suitable weight it should work just fine at idle. The manual requires racing the engine periodically if running at low speeds for over 2 hours but requires not less than 5 minutes of warm up before _any_ load is applied. Letting the oil splash about and passing it through the filter once or twice before things get really hot seems like a good thing to me. The motor is a bigish chunk of metal and gaskets and spings and such and heating it up fast must cause stress. I've had the exhaust elbows off both engines twice and there was no evidence of unusual coking. FWIW, I generally push the idle speed up during the warm up and have some alternator load so the motors aren't likely to be running way under temp anyway. -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 24, 9:52 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
Did you trywww.boatdiesel.com? Yes, thanks. There were a couple of questions that sounded interesting but I wasn't able to read any of the replies w/o forking over $25. I just hate the idea of sending them my credit card info and having them say "check your fuel lines"... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 13:58:40 -0700 (PDT), "
wrote: Yes, thanks. There were a couple of questions that sounded interesting but I wasn't able to read any of the replies w/o forking over $25. I just hate the idea of sending them my credit card info and having them say "check your fuel lines"... It's a good forum, lots of experts. Somewhere along the line you will get your $25 worth. I believe the classic way of checking for air leaks is to insert a piece of clear plastic tubing in the fuel feed just before the injection pump and watch for bubbles. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
wrote in message ... On Mar 24, 9:30 am, "Edgar" wrote: Warming up a diesel for 10 minutes is unnecessarily long and does no good. Give them a couple of minutes to make sure everything is working and then leave the dock and get some load on. Prolonged idling from cold causes a lot of wear. Help me out, how does it cause wear? Sure, I don't know squat about engines but it from book learning and a tiny bit of expericene: Assuming that the oil is of a suitable weight it should work just fine at idle. The manual requires racing the engine periodically if running at low speeds for over 2 hours but requires not less than 5 minutes of warm up before _any_ load is applied. Letting the oil splash about and passing it through the filter once or twice before things get really hot seems like a good thing to me. The motor is a bigish chunk of metal and gaskets and spings and such and heating it up fast must cause stress. I've had the exhaust elbows off both engines twice and there was no evidence of unusual coking. FWIW, I generally push the idle speed up during the warm up and have some alternator load so the motors aren't likely to be running way under temp anyway. -- Tom. When the cylinder walls are cold acidic combustion products stay on the cylinder wall instead of leaving as vapours with the exhaust gases and this leads to increased wear. Maximum wear occurs near top dead centre when the piston is slowing and reversing its motion because this is the area where there is least oil film and the slow motion of the piston rings does not prevent some metal to metal contact. Lower down the cylinder the piston rings are riding on an oil film and wear is much lower. Idling for 5 minutes is not as good for warming up the engine as getting some load on within, say, 2 minutes. The bit about 'racing' the engine after prolonged idling is to get some fuel through the injectors as the flow at idling is so small that the fuel in the injector can start to polymerise and clog the holes in the nozzle. Here again running at speed with some load on is better than 'racing' the engine if by racing you mean running up to full speed on no load. I accept that your alternator will provide some load but whether this is enough to be effective depends on the size of the alternator relative to the power of the engine and whether the alternator finds a battery that is already fully charged or one that is low and needs some charge. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 24, 12:19 pm, "Edgar" wrote:
When the cylinder walls are cold acidic combustion products stay on the cylinder wall instead of leaving as vapours with the exhaust gases and this leads to increased wear. This I did not know. Idling for 5 minutes is not as good for warming up the engine as getting some load on within, say, 2 minutes. The manual is pretty specific. I wonder if there is a trade off that depends somewhat on the engine involved. The bit about 'racing' the engine after prolonged idling is to get some fuel through the injectors as the flow at idling is so small that the fuel in the injector can start to polymerise and clog the holes in the nozzle. "This is done to clean out carbon from the cylinder and the fuel injection valve." Is what they say and I think that means what you said. :) Thanks, -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
"Roger Long" wrote in
: I agree thought that excessive idling isn't good. "Reducing to 10 minutes" sounds like too much to me. Drive by any truck stop at 2AM in the cold. They idle 24/7 and only run 2 million miles between overhauls. What nonsense. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
Larry wrote:
"Roger Long" wrote in : I agree thought that excessive idling isn't good. "Reducing to 10 minutes" sounds like too much to me. Drive by any truck stop at 2AM in the cold. They idle 24/7 and only run 2 million miles between overhauls. What nonsense. Idling a diesel engine such as in a boat means it will never warm up to proper operating temperatures thus causing more wear. In the case of a semi in a truck stop, there is an automatic shutter in front of the radiator which closes down to keep the idling engine at operating temps. They don't shut them down because in the morning they would again be abusing a cold engine. G |
Injection Limiter adjustment
Gordon wrote in
: Larry wrote: "Roger Long" wrote in : I agree thought that excessive idling isn't good. "Reducing to 10 minutes" sounds like too much to me. Drive by any truck stop at 2AM in the cold. They idle 24/7 and only run 2 million miles between overhauls. What nonsense. Idling a diesel engine such as in a boat means it will never warm up to proper operating temperatures thus causing more wear. In the case of a semi in a truck stop, there is an automatic shutter in front of the radiator which closes down to keep the idling engine at operating temps. They don't shut them down because in the morning they would again be abusing a cold engine. G There were two 8V92TA train engines in my buddy Dan's 1981 Hatteras 56. Until I came along, he never operated these monsters at any speed over half of hull speed because he was terrified of it. We're talking about YEARS of "just idling around". The first time I opened the throttles wide as we cleared the Charleston Jetties, enough carbon black poured out of the pipes to make a mountain of tires, spread out over miles of ocean as a black cloud! She smoothed right out after clearing her throat. He went below, convinced the engines would explode in a blast of parts as she cleared 2/3 of redline. They didn't....they were fine....albeit a tiny bit noisy because Dan had the engine room hatches open with his fingers in his ears....(c; Soon after he spotted the fuel flow meters and did a little math, I pulled the throttles back to a more economical position, just above planing speed. What a beautiful yacht she was cruising along, a giant bassboat. When he sold her, right after Larry got everything working below the galley house and engine rooms and electronics suite, the buyer had General Diesel, our DD shop, to pull them down and inspect them. I knew he was wasting his money because they cranked so easily I'd be afraid to jack them over with a big wrench for fear they would spontaneously start they started so easily...GD found ONE out-of-spec spring in the starboard engine, in spite of Dan's "trawler speeds" all those years. They were just fine. I saw her a couple of years later and talked to the new owner who'd had her in the Caribbean long enough to completely blister her underwater hull. He cracked an injector, but that was all. She was still just fine, thousands of hours later. You yachties need a little reality check. Ask a local shrimper if you can go out with him for a day and watch his diesel(s) run. Count all the idling along hours during the day and multiply by the shrimp season... Notice how his engines are all pampered and pure like yours. I always thought what killed them first was the water in the injection system caused by the lazy ******* that owned them NOT filling the tanks before he stored them and NOT getting the oil changed because "I didn't run it much". If you crank it full of new oil, a biologic clock starts ticking as the fuel blowby consumes the lube oil...even if you "don't run it much". That's what kills sailboat engines.....disuse. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
Larry wrote:
Gordon wrote in : Larry wrote: "Roger Long" wrote in : I agree thought that excessive idling isn't good. "Reducing to 10 minutes" sounds like too much to me. Drive by any truck stop at 2AM in the cold. They idle 24/7 and only run 2 million miles between overhauls. What nonsense. Idling a diesel engine such as in a boat means it will never warm up to proper operating temperatures thus causing more wear. In the case of a semi in a truck stop, there is an automatic shutter in front of the radiator which closes down to keep the idling engine at operating temps. They don't shut them down because in the morning they would again be abusing a cold engine. G There were two 8V92TA train engines in my buddy Dan's 1981 Hatteras 56. Until I came along, he never operated these monsters at any speed over half of hull speed because he was terrified of it. We're talking about YEARS of "just idling around". Sorry Larry but half of hull speed is NOT idling! Gordon |
Injection Limiter adjustment
Gordon wrote:
Larry wrote: "Roger Long" wrote in : I agree thought that excessive idling isn't good. "Reducing to 10 minutes" sounds like too much to me. Drive by any truck stop at 2AM in the cold. They idle 24/7 and only run 2 million miles between overhauls. What nonsense. Idling a diesel engine such as in a boat means it will never warm up to proper operating temperatures thus causing more wear. Funny, my diesel has a thermostat, runs at the same temp in idle as it does at full throttle. Cheers Marty |
Injection Limiter adjustment
Roger Long wrote:
"Marty" wrote Funny, my diesel has a thermostat, runs at the same temp in idle as it does at full throttle. That's temperature measured in one spot and will be the same at idle as full throttle if the cooling system is performing properly. When starting from cold however, there are variations of temperature all over the engine that are not measured or directly controlled by a thermostat. Incidentally, idling an engine that has been run at normal power so that everything is fully warmed up is probably not nearly as bad for it as starting it and then running at idle for a couple hours to charge batteries. Everything is warm and, although it may cool down a bit in some parts, it won't go through a long period with some parts cold, minimial oil flow, and To be fair, we're probably talking apples and oranges here. My diesel is a little Volvo D1-13, http://www.volvo.com/NR/exeres/FD791...C27D991387.htm It probably quite quickly comes to the same temperature through out. When I installed it I went over it with a infrared thermometer and found very little variation in temp from the bottom of the block to top of the head, may about 5deg C after 10 minutes of idling. Cheers Marty |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 22, 3:06 am, "Roger Long" wrote:
Say, I just discovered that there is a plate that allows access to the injector limit spring and mechanism on my engine without having to pull the whole rear cover off. Take a look at your engine, I'll bet it has something similar. Ok, I just pulled the cover off. In as much as I can see anything it all looks fine. The hole is a lot smaller than it looks on the drawings... The little spring loaded rod that comes out of the limiter follows the throttle crank through its entire motion and appears to operate smoothly. I can't really see all the springs towards the tranny end of the motor but they are there. The whole assy is nicely oiled and looks lovely. I did tear the gasket while removing the plate. Any thoughts on whether I need to order the Yanmar part or if I can get away with some other method (eg. goo or paper)? I pondered the injection limiter and I can't see any way to fiddle w/ it w/o breaking the seal. Unlike the drawings the seal is through the cap nut rather than the lock nut... Hmmmm.... -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 25, 9:01 am, " wrote:
I did tear the gasket while removing the plate. Any thoughts on whether I need to order the Yanmar part or if I can get away with some other method (eg. goo or paper)? The local dealer has them in stock for $1.50... So, I'll get a new Yanmar (tm) one. -- Tom. |
Injection Limiter adjustment
On Mar 25, 9:36 am, " wrote:
On Mar 25, 9:01 am, " wrote: I did tear the gasket while removing the plate. Any thoughts on whether I need to order the Yanmar part or if I can get away with some other method (eg. goo or paper)? The local dealer has them in stock for $1.50... So, I'll get a new Yanmar (tm) one. -- Tom. Just installed the new gasket. I have had the plate on and off 3 times now; I'm so glad I don't pay myself by the hour... There was a bit of paint and gunk on the throttle crank itself (the dealers repainted the engine when they had it). So, I oiled the crank axle and worked it back and forth a bit. It runs quite smoothly now. After the first re-assembly the motor showed its old hunting symptoms to a greater extent than I've ever seen before. However, with the new gasket in it runs perfectly... Sadly I didn't keep all the other variables constant. The solar panels have been charging the batteries and the hour break to run down to the Yanmar dealer probably didn't let the motor cool off entirely. I'll try it again in the morning. -- Tom. |
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