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Default Why diesels smoke

One thing led to another and soon I learned something pertinent to
boats.
I had read something in our local paper about very old engines called
"Hit or miss" engines and that led me to "hot bulb" engines, an early
variation of compression ignition and then I was wondering about
various fuels for modern diesels so looked up diesels on Wiki where
there is a good article.
Anyway, the article discusses emissions from diesels and why thye
smoke under load. Apparently, they smoke because they are operating
out of their range so the fuel cannot be burned completely. The black
smoke is what results. This is why a fouled prop causes a sailboat
diesel to smoke and why diesel trucks to smoke under heavy load..
They also smoke when cold which explains why my small sailboat engine
smokes initially but when warm does not.
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Default Why diesels smoke

On Fri, 24 Jul 2009 21:19:06 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

One thing led to another and soon I learned something pertinent to
boats.
I had read something in our local paper about very old engines called
"Hit or miss" engines and that led me to "hot bulb" engines, an early
variation of compression ignition and then I was wondering about
various fuels for modern diesels so looked up diesels on Wiki where
there is a good article.
Anyway, the article discusses emissions from diesels and why thye
smoke under load. Apparently, they smoke because they are operating
out of their range so the fuel cannot be burned completely. The black
smoke is what results. This is why a fouled prop causes a sailboat
diesel to smoke and why diesel trucks to smoke under heavy load..
They also smoke when cold which explains why my small sailboat engine
smokes initially but when warm does not.


Smoke of any kind except for a few seconds after start up indicates
that the engine is either overloaded or needs to be serviced.

http://www.answers.com/topic/diesel-smoke

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Default Why diesels smoke

On Fri, 24 Jul 2009 21:19:06 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:

One thing led to another and soon I learned something pertinent to
boats.
I had read something in our local paper about very old engines called
"Hit or miss" engines and that led me to "hot bulb" engines, an early
variation of compression ignition and then I was wondering about
various fuels for modern diesels so looked up diesels on Wiki where
there is a good article.
Anyway, the article discusses emissions from diesels and why thye
smoke under load. Apparently, they smoke because they are operating
out of their range so the fuel cannot be burned completely. The black
smoke is what results. This is why a fouled prop causes a sailboat
diesel to smoke and why diesel trucks to smoke under heavy load..
They also smoke when cold which explains why my small sailboat engine
smokes initially but when warm does not.


Not necessarily.

Incomplete burns on modern diesels on start up are common - diesels
are a compression/heat ignition engine. After running though, heavy
smoke indicates a heavier load than the engine was designed for.

It would also be a good time to have your engine serviced.
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Default Why diesels smoke

On Jul 25, 8:29*am, Wizard of Woodstock wrote:
On Fri, 24 Jul 2009 21:19:06 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch

wrote:
One thing led to another and soon I learned something pertinent to
boats.
I had read something in our local paper about very old engines called
"Hit or miss" engines and that led me to "hot bulb" engines, an early
variation of compression ignition and then I was wondering about
various fuels for modern diesels so looked up diesels on Wiki where
there is a good article.
Anyway, the article discusses emissions from diesels and why thye
smoke under load. *Apparently, they smoke because they are operating
out of their range so the fuel cannot be burned completely. *The black
smoke is what results. *This is why a fouled prop causes a sailboat
diesel to smoke and why diesel trucks to smoke under heavy load..
They also smoke when cold which explains why my small sailboat engine
smokes initially but when warm does not.


Not necessarily.

Incomplete burns on modern diesels on start up are common - diesels
are a compression/heat ignition engine. *After running though, heavy
smoke indicates a heavier load than the engine was designed for.

It would also be a good time to have your engine serviced.


A better time to have my prop cleaned, it is summer, heaviest barnacle
growth time. All I'm doing now is making the barnacles dizzy.
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