Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#20
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Capt John" wrote in message ... Well Bruce, if I was starving the engine to the point that the injectors were no longer getting enough fuel to return any fuel via the return line then, you surely realize that their would be a very significant reduction in power output, to the point that the engine would stall. In your case, your talking about a generator, if you put an ammeter on the output of that generator you'll probably find that it's not really loaded up to full capacity, they rarely are, except when your starting electric motors. In our case, we're talking about boats, that's the reason for this being under rec.boats, and boat engines tend to be much more heavily loaded up than say a truck or a generator engine, that's why they rate generators with a constant load and intermittant load rating. In boats, what tends to happen is that the filters start to clog up while your running, over time. Some of the first signs of this are increased black smoke behind the boat (you see a haze, it's not like a building on fire), soot buildup on the transom around the exhaust, increased engine temperature and increased exhaust temperature. At some point, if allowed to go on, the engine begins to loose RPM's. Remenber, when you increase the throttle setting on a diesel your increasing the amount of fuel delivered to each cylinder and advancing the point where the fuel is injected. So when the fuel system is restricted the amount of fuel delivered per stroke drops slightly, but the advance doesn't change. Another symptom of a restricted fuel supply is if you've been up and running, and you have to slow down, for whatever reason, and then you try to come back up to speed, the engines will not come back up to the same RPM's as they were before. All you have to do if for any reason you have to run at low load for a long time then open up to as near as full power as you can get from time to time. This will clear everything out from the nozzles and ensure that the exhaust remains clear. It may not be easy always on a generator because you may not be able to control the load but for a boat propulsion engine if you open her up the prop will take the power as the power taken is proportional to revs cubed. A diesel will not gum up its injectors unless you run it for long periods at less than 1/2 or (better) 2/3 load without bursts of higher power. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Fuel polishing | Cruising | |||
Fuel polishing | Cruising | |||
Fuel Polishing System Finished! | Electronics |