Talk:Diesel engine/Archive 3

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Archive 1Archive 2Archive 3Archive 4Archive 5

Two quibbles

Diesel fuel may have a lower flash point, however the autoignition temperature (energy) is lower. Cigarette butts tossed into gasoline and diesel are much more likely to create a conflagaration with diesel fuel. Second omission is that a much higher proportion of the energy of diesel fuel is carbon, therefore not as green a fuel. (Of Carbon burning in Oxygen: 85% of energy from burning to Carbon Monoxide and only 15% burning CO to Carbon Dioxide.) Also, Diesel engines run at high compression and high pressure which forms significant Nitrogen Oxide pollution. The comment about "some form of air injection" is poorly researched and undocumented: NOx is reduced in gasoline engines by running the mixture fuel rich, not air rich. The resultant carbon monoxide rich mixture is reacted with injected air in the catalytic converter. Diesel engines generate Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) by virtue of their higher pressure and higher temperature of combustion. Note that the equilibrium of 2 CO = CO2 + C is 1400 degrees at the higher limits of gasoline engines, but below diesel combustion temps. Reduction of NOx in diesel combustion is by adding Ammonia or other low valent Nitrogen compounds during the combustion [1] [2], or exhaust gas recycling (EGR) [3]. Shjacks45 (talk) 03:58, 11 February 2014 (UTC)

Diesel No 1 vs Diesel No 2 fuel. Biodiesel wrong.

  • Didn't see a link to Diesel fuels etc. like Cetane number or reference to other C-20 type fuels (Kerosene, Jet Fuel, ...).

Lawsuit that can be googled about older fishing boat fueling an dock ran out of #1 diesel so they used #2 diesel because it was the more expensive (higher grade) fuel, narrower distillation range. However the older engine depended on the waxy components in the #1 Diesel for lubrication and the engine failed, was damaged, using #2 Diesel.

  • Most waste cooking oil is treated with small ammounts of methanolic sodium hydroxide to removed acidity from decomposed fats. Hydroxide does not catalyze transesterification and not enough methanol to react. Modern gas engines use fuel injection just like diesel engines and can burn the junk mixture that is now called gasoline (isooctane and n-heptane co-distill; octane rating was % octane; current gasoline ranges from propane to cetane and includes toluene and benzene et al). Foolish listing of alcohol since ethyl alcohol boils at 80 degrees which is higher than most engine compartments; engine fluid handling equipment doesn't handle vapor successfully. Vegetable oil is admixed with diesel oil because of poor startup characteristics at cold temperatures (many oils congeal at cold temperatures) as well as much higher Autoignition temperature and flash point of vegetable oil compared to diesel oil (Cetane).

Shjacks45 (talk) 06:40, 11 February 2014 (UTC)

Proper noun

The term "Diesel" is a proper noun, and should, therefore, always be capitalised, the uninformed opinions of certain "authorities" notwithstanding. The engine is named after its inventor, Rudolf Diesel. There are editors on Wikipedia who have been extensively using lowercase for the name, and even reverting corrections from capitalised to uncapitalised. To continuously insist that it should be uncapitalised is as absurd as referring to vehicles from Ford Motor Company as "fords" or vehicles from General Motors as "chevrolets", etc.  QuicksilverT @ 19:59, 13 March 2014 (UTC)

Diesel didn't invent the diesel engine, as we know it today. He invented the Diesel cycle and the original low-speed air blast injection Diesel engine. These bear little relation to the engine we use today, at least not at the car and truck scale. Andy Dingley (talk) 20:31, 13 March 2014 (UTC)
Here it is, as I understand it. The *name* "Diesel" is a proper noun. The *term* "diesel" is a common noun. It's not absurd, because it's *not* a brand name or any other precisely registered body of intellectual property, but rather, of fairly common or genericized (if those are the correct terms) technology. AFAIK. — Smuckola (Email) (Talk) 07:27, 17 March 2014 (UTC)
It's actually a noun adjunct (a noun acting as an adjective), in this case a diesel (fuel) engine. Diesel fuel is a common noun, as mentioned, not a trade mark, and is why this is lower case, as contrasted with Diesel cycle (or Diesel's cycle to think of it a different way). Hence lower case is correct here. Mauls (talk) 10:33, 24 March 2014 (UTC)
So, if I understand you folks correctly, we should be writing all automotive-related names exclusively in lowercase from now one. Perhaps you'd be happy with others writing your surnames in lowercase, too.  QuicksilverT @ 18:01, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
The Dingley Act is capitalised, the dingley tin isn't. Dingley tins are the key-opened tins traditionally used for sardines and the root of our family fortune, in the Band-aid industry.
In credible sources, Diesel cycle is capitalised as a proper noun, diesel engine (outside Wikipedia) very rarely so. Andy Dingley (talk) 18:47, 28 March 2014 (UTC)
Quicksilver, although your concern on this is entirely good-faith, it's also misplaced. Despite your impression that lowercasing certain eponymous terms is (to paraphrase) "a Wikipedia thing" or "an unreliable-so-called authority thing", it is in reality done by all major dictionaries on various eponymous terms, although the individual dictionaries differ in which terms they choose to lowercase. Take a look at eponym > orthographic conventions. Read the section Capitalized versus lowercase. Look at the refs in it. Read the table at Comparison table of eponym orthographic styling. Look at the ref citations in that table, click on them, and look at which dictionaries they are from. In short, the list of "uninformed" "authorities" (in your air quotes) that you are going up against includes Merriam-Webster, Oxford University Press's Oxford Dictionaries (try it yourself: type "diesel" at http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/ and press enter), The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, The Chicago Manual of Style, Dorland's medical reference works, American Medical Association style, American Psychological Association style, and all other major dictionaries and style guides. Once you have changed the minds of Merriam-Webster and the Oxford Dictionaries, you could expect Wikipedia to follow suit, per WP:RS. — ¾-10 19:50, 28 March 2014 (UTC)

The article needs improvement

Hello. I think that currently the article is lacking in that it talks about Diesel engines, but describes neither their structure nor operation. There's no description of what a Diesel engine actually is (Ie. it's a machine which consists of an engine block in which there are cylinders and a crankcase, which has pistons, bearings etc) nor how it works (The 4 stroke and 2 stroke cycle).

For instance, currently at the beginning of the “Operating principle” section we can find the following text:

In the true diesel engine, only air is initially introduced into the combustion chamber. The air is then compressed with a compression ratio typically between 15:1 and 22:1 resulting in 40-bar (4.0 MPa; 580 psi) pressure compared to 8 to 14 bars (0.80 to 1.40 MPa; 120 to 200 psi) in the petrol engine. This high compression heats the air to 550 °C (1,022 °F).

But there's however, no mention of where the air is introduced and then how it's compressed. Basically, the reader has to already know how a Diesel engine is and have an idea how it works to make sense of this.

I'd like to fix this problem by changing the “Operating principle“ section into a “Structure and operation” section which contains a description of the structure of a diesel engine interleaved with a description its operation. I have access to the book “Light and Heavy Vehicle Technology” by Malcolm Nunney which I plan on using as a source.

Please comment on this and let me know in this talk page if you'd like to participate on this change as well.

QrTTf7fH (talk) 16:19, 25 July 2014 (UTC).

I forgot to say: the elements of the structure of a gasoline and Diesel engine are almost identical, though the proportions differ. The operation of a 4 stroke Diesel engine and gasoline engine are also very similar. I'm considering to make a page operation of Diesel and gasoline engines and include only a summary and a pointer from the articles Diesel engine and gasoline engine. Again, comments are requested on this proposal. QrTTf7fH (talk) 16:40, 25 July 2014 (UTC).

Capable of self-aspiration in the Supercharging section

Two-cycle chainsaws, model airplane, and motorcycles don't need blowers. They are self-aspirated because they are gasoline fueled and they use the crankcase in the cycle. (The model airplane uses a glow plug for ignition. The chainsaw and motorcycle use spark plugs.) I think the previous editor meant to say that "Diesel" two-cycles need a blower. Questions or comments?66.81.132.81 (talk) 02:59, 5 August 2014 (UTC)

I'd say that crankcase compression is equivalent to a blower. See also Kadenacy effect. Biscuittin (talk) 16:48, 2 January 2015 (UTC)

Merger of Egr vs scr

See Talk:Egr vs scr. Biscuittin (talk) 10:00, 9 September 2014 (UTC)

I propose a merger with Diesel exhaust rather than Diesel engine because the latter article is very large already. Biscuittin (talk) 10:08, 9 September 2014 (UTC)
See also Talk:Diesel engine/Archive 2. Biscuittin (talk) 10:38, 9 September 2014 (UTC)

References

Engine starting

What does this mean ?

Diesel engines run on the Dual Cycle

Minority viewpoint

Removal of already substantiated claim based on a misunderstanding

George Brayton should get credit for his contributions to the development of the Diesel engine

23:1 ≠ 40:1

Ignition can't be ignited!. It can be initiated, however.

Proposal to add the description of Brayton's 1874 Ready motor to the history section

The Diesel engine page is full of unsubstantiated and unproven claims / All unverifiable claims should be deleted.

The Diesel engine page is making mutiple claims that Herbert Akroyd Stuart was the first inventor of the diesel engine

Forced induction

George Brayton, Brayton cycle and Diesel engine

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI