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Matt Lang wrote:
Had a look at the chart, what's the issue??? No issue, i just wanted to see how much oil the 2 stroke actually used. The benchmark is a 4 stroke motor which is usually is not known as "uses oil". I didnt want to fel bad ripping around burning loads of oil, thus I want to see how much i am useing compared to if I had bought a 4 stroke. The boat and the other motorized toys are getting winterized ![]() ![]() It confirms that the modern 2 strokes use less oil than the older ones, but this is an allusion really when you take into account the extra No, actually it doeasnt, unless you consider the optimax old desogn. The optimax is an older design and the first generation DFI. Lets see to how many generations they will actually make it ... The chart shows Merc Optimax, Whoevers (Bombardier?) ETec, and Mercs 4 stroke Verado. The oldest design there is the optimax. All of the above use less oil as a conventional 2 stroke. costs & while the dealers won't admit it you "should" clean the holding tank every year. Once in there oil subject to heat & moisture deteriorates into sludge with even the smallest amounts of water. This is a very good point which I will investigate right away in order to keep my motor happy ![]() cheap oil or maybe other suitable substances. Do you have any procedure or recommendation? In the end it may be cheaper to buy a new oil tank? This needs to be looked into. I wouldn't think "flushing" would be needed indeed the suggestion here is not to risk touching the existing hose fittings etc for fear of creating a leak. Also even a small air lock can be trouble. Again "all" the oil in a 2 stroke (by your graph the same or more than a 4 stroke) still goes somewhere, either burnt or out the exhaust as raw oil, I accept what you say about oily rags etc but we're talking the entirety of the oil, not just sundry cleanup wipes. Yes correct. This point was not looked at in my comaprison and was not intended to be looked at. It is a very important and valid point though. Someone needs to create an eco balance to see whats worse in the end. If 4 stroke oil is recycled then thats best. If its done like some people I know do by not recycling or just recycling the oil but not the filter and rags then it maybe worse than the 2 stroke just burning it up. There is another issue with the dfi 2 strokes & their oil, it's related to raw oil injected into the crankcase, the oil builds up till excess is "transferred", it either then gets burnt or goes straight through the exhaust as raw oil. I see no serious issue. Exactly that happens with conventional 2 strokes ... of course in general its not good that 2 strokes burn oil ... A conventional 2 stroke even an efi that injects raw oil, still "mixes" it with fuel in the crankcase & it's in those premises that I was suggesting the oil itself doesn't get the chance to lie around getting hot, whereas the situation is slightly different with the DFIs, it can & does. The system injects very small amounts at idle or even low revs, however the oil is subject to considerable heat buildup, unlike 4 strokes oil or even an old tech 2 stroke when it was diluted with fuel & traveled through the engine relatively quickly. This is why they've promoted special oils, because the oil can get hot enough to bake behind the rings & it's all down hill from there. Yes the DFI motors need the expensive oil. I only know the optimax and it partly recycles its oil, which is good but this requires different oil then the normal 2 stroke uses which is bad, as the recirculated oil must be made so it doesnt break down from it (expensive). Harry is a liar & has never actually owned a boat much less an optimax engine. As for his old "hundreds of hours" lie, when he fabricated that phantom boat in 98 he claimed here after a few mths use he had 200 hours on it, it's just more evidence of a total lie. Its not for me to judge that. I can not see a reason that would make people claim they have owned certain boats and motors which they actually havent. But to each their own. Karen, I appreciate the discussion with you and the points you bring in! You seem to be more knowledgable about the subject as ... lets say ... the average female (and in fact male)... Dont take this wrong, this isnt sexist talk! Whats your background and your background with motors if I may ask? When the DFI were released we (we is the blokes I work with) took a particular interest because for literally years before we'd been watching Orbital the promoters of the optimax system, & Ficht trying to flog their systems around the major engine manufacturers. Ficht was originally promoted as a diesel injection system & orbital even got Ford to run a test fleet of small cars on orbital 2 strokes. Particularly Orbital in our view were all froth & bubble they made extravagant claims in the local press releases it seemed every second Wednesday; they claimed Ford were about to adopt it, then even the son of the bent Indonesian ruler at the time Sohato was said to be going to build cars with orbital engines & teach Detroit a thing or two:-) it would have been hilarious had it not sucked endless sad investors of their money. Never once would Orbital deal with the common call from almost everyone in the local industry of "how do you say you've dealt with the problem of heat buildup when engines are run lean???", they usually muttered something about extra atomisation happening in that primary manifold from the air pump, however it didn't work. We also watched their patent applications closely (when I say we we're "interested" I mean we had a definite interest:-)). After a while & particularly after Ford dismissed it as nonsense, we noticed most of their filings were related to solutions to problems that were of their own making, indeed we felt every ad hoc "fix" they seemed to dream up would just lead to more questions than solutions. As for Ficht it was much more easily identified as doomed, it's original patents involved pumping fuel (diesel in this case) around a closed rail at high velocity, then electromagnetically slamming a valve shut in it's path, the impact shock created pressure waves in the system (exactly like water pipe hammer when the washing machine valve slams shut) they claimed the peaks of which could be harvested by an injector nozzle. Of course anyone who knew the slightest about the amount of energy & force needed to create sudden extreme pressure rises, that could be sustained over the period of time a diesel needs to inject fuel, immediately dismissed it as nonsense (Germany the home of fuel injection didn't even give it a second glance). The Ficht principle is the same as water hammer in domestic plumbing or pressure spikes in hydraulic systems i.e. very well known & understood, it's a bother & can cause damage but as soon as there's an outlet for "spikes" (usually a simple damper) the pressure goes away. Ficht is an attempt to get a great pressure rise over a very short period & do it essentially for no energy input. Something for nothing??? not likely in this universe as we currently know it:-) We were more than a little bemused when Brunswick & OMC announced they had signed up with orbital & ficht respectively, the orbital was as it was & the Ficht they'd changed the execution so instead of suddenly stopping fuel at high velocity they just struck a solid ball to great the shock waves.A bit like dropping a rock in a bucket of water, the waves created go over the edge. Ficht failed spectacularly as predicted because the impact pressure rise was never going to supply enough pressure rise to give proper atomisation, coupled with the lean mixtures it had a serious failure rate & as I said was doomed from the beginning. Optimax faired a little better but still had the problem of low injection pressure (they use a normal injector pressure but unlike a normal injector into a vehicle manifold (which is usually below atmospheric pressure) they inject against the pressure of the output from the additional air pump, so the atomisation problem remains, as does the question of lean mixture heat buildup. Both technologies are by now totally discredited, Brunswick are clearly going 4 stroke throughout the range & Ficht brought OMC down, then Bomb (who have some proper engineers) got rid of it, now in a last desperate gasp E-tec will try to mitigate against the symptoms by using ever more heat resistant oil & pistons that will not "melt" till a higher temp:-) Sorry to smile but it's absurd!!! if petrol sees any temp around or above 250C it auto ignites (detonates), even the lowliest of aluminium is good to well over 600C. So their latest suck it & see try is as doomed as the original Fichts & for the exact same reasons; (i) The impact shock injectors can never create enough pressure to properly atomise the fuel (Yamaha need 800 psi & they are also going to 4 strokes). (ii) The so called injector is not an injector at all but not much better than a flap valve/garden hose nozzle, it will only open when the combustion chamber pressure is well below the pressure in the shock injectors. At power they "try" to start injection up to 240degs BTDC i.e. before the previous charge has even uncovered the exhaust ports. (iii) The continuous firing of the spark is just the same confirmation of how lean the mix is at low to med revs & of course it means accurate timing of the actual ignition point is impossible, this means some firing will be as intended others very late, just so long as there isn't a "miss" because then they fail the EPA. (iv) The latest sensor to detect abnormal combustion (knock sensor) is proof positive they're well aware of the issue, however it's also proof they still don't understand the real cause of the engine failures. (v) It's long been known (mainly from aircraft engines, but also some attempts with car engines Chrysler, Honda & Mitsubishi) that engine can run on very lean mixtures, however the "abnormal" combustion leads to heat buildup in the chamber surfaces. Usually an engine running very lean will not detonate while still extremely lean (i.e. their latest sensor will not sense anything), but this doesn't stop the chamber surfaces getting overly hot. (vi) In an OB 2 stroke the head can be kept very cool being alloy & having an endless supply of cool water, but the piston/rings in a 2 stroke is almost totally uncooled. Once the piston temps gets over 250C (not very hot really) then auto ignition is a certainty but while lean probably no harm done, simply because there isn't enough fuel present. (vii) The trouble starts when the power is quickly increased above the lean burn mode, suddenly there is plenty of fuel available & this sudden excess fuel rather than cool the piston just auto ignites but now it will lead to full on detonation = more heat = more detonation etc etc bang. (viii) Their new sensor will detect this but what can it really do??? retard the spark timing?? too late the overly hot piston is causing the auto ignition not the spark timing; increase the mixture??? again too late it's the sudden influx of fuel onto the overly hot surface that set the full detonation going in the first place; what's left?? electronically lower the power?? well consumers won't be impressed with their engine slowing when they suddenly give it full throttle. It's instructive to see how the same lean mixtures problem has been approached by others over many years; (a) The car people Chrysler, Honda, Mitsubishi & Mercedes have all gone to extreme lengths to guard against excess heat being built up while the engine is in lean mode, mostly this limits lean mixtures to idle (no power at all) over run, (No power at all & boat motors don't have it anyway) or very light throttle high speed cruise (again hardly any power at all, most cars it's when the EGR (exhaust gas recirculation) is engaged, so the average modern slippery sedan needs about 30hp to hold it at 65mph (flat road blah blah blah) & this is usually around 1800-2000 rpm or 12-15% of max power at about 35-40% of max revs i.e. the cyl pressure is extremely low with lots of air (& exhaust) going through keeping the chamber cool. (a boat motor has no very light load high speed cruise, as the revs rise so does the load from the prop it increases at a steepening rate) All these precautions yet they're all 4 strokes (half the number of firings & plenty of oil under the piston to carry the heat away). (b) The piston aircraft engines are also run lean although never anything like as lean as Ficht & Optimax claim. Aircraft lean as the air density lowers with altitude so they're not really very lean at all & allowing that they're big slow turning essentially lazy engines, even so they still run the risk of having heat buildup in the chamber when operated too lean, so pilots are trained never to recover from lean cruising by just giving the engine full rich mixture & more throttle (exactly what happens when an OB is suddenly powered up after a long run in the lean mode). Pilots are trained to richen the mixture slowly as the power is slowly increased, this is to give the chamber temps time to normalise as the extra fuel is added; just in case:-) You are also welcome to email me. My email as posted is real. Sorry to be so long again, but this subject has been a war since 98 & it seems till Brunswick are all 4 stroke & E-tec has failed it will continue. Mine isn't; the name is OK but it's tpg com au K Matt |
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