I also don't buy the mismatched parts story. I've built a handful of gas engines & most were frankenbuilds of some sort. Had a 1.8L corolla block mated to a 1.6L mr2 head using Chevrolet valve springs and a Porsche timing belt breathing through a Mitsubishi turbo. No problems, but I assembled it with care and thoroughly checked the machine shop's work...
Kevin Rutherfrauds $200000 Signature glider truck has complete engine failure!!!
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Bobby Barkert, Mar 7, 2015.
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foreverlearning, Long FLD and Bean Jr. Thank this.
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I agree with RedForeman on factory built vs quality shop built, also on only getting your pick of 2 out of time/cost/quality.
I've built many gas engines from the bare block up, blueprinted strokers included, and only assisted in some diesel builds.
My experience and lesson in "High Profile Big Name Shops" vs (what I call) the "No Name Guy with good references".
I first had machine work done on blocks & heads by a Big Name shop.
End result:
Had 2 blocks decked (milled), and upon checking when I got them back, I confirmed the deck surfaces were from +0.005 on one end to -0.035 on the other end.
Side to side was a disaster also. Completely ruined 2 good pristine bare blocks. Yes, I made THEM eat it and replace both.
Most mechanics/assemblers wouldn't even have double-checked their work, and went on with the pistons, crank, & head installation.
I think similar 'oversights' happened at PP.
"No Name Guy" had tight circle of "word of mouth" references. Worked out of his small shop behind his house. Had a few lathes, milling machines, etc.
On "acceptable" factory tolerances of say,, +/- .002 all my machine work he did, had tolerances of +/- .0003 (super-tight tolerance,, virtually perfect).
When I hear the entire PP & KR story, this lesson is the first thing that comes to my mind. Big shops & big names don't mean diddly.ColumbiaBoB, tommymonza, brian991219 and 2 others Thank this. -
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So what happens to a diesel when you over advance the fuel delivery and lug the engine up a hill and get it hot?
i am not being a smart a.z.z. Hammer just asking.
i participated in the murdering of two 6 cylinder Volvo marine Diesels that died from their own Manufactures recommendations.
Than single handedly killed a Yanmar/Toyota marine engine in a period of 12 months once again by the recommendations of the manufacture.
The manufactures recommendations had them over propped. A boat is like being in 13th from start to finish and going up one big hill ,there is no relief. If there is an error on gearing it will show it's ugly head soon.
I blew countless Turbos , burned holes thru 3800 dollar aluminum exhaust manifolds and finally just lost so much compression after a thousand hours the motors were 1/2 as powerful as new.
All from trying to get too much power out of a motor at a certain RPM that the manufacture recommended.Last edited: Mar 16, 2015
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Not hard to imagine Cat techs saying "No problem here". Whether that is actually true... is a whole 'nother subject.
Here's some good info I had bookmarked a good while back.
I've copied/pasted only the fuel dilution part, but the rest of the article contains additional informative info on oil analysis.
Here's the link to the full article... Four Lethal Diesel Engine Oil Contaminants
Fuel Dilution
Frequent starts of an engine, excessive idling and cold running conditions can lead to moderate fuel dilution problems. Severe dilution (excess of two percent) is associated with leakage, fuel injector problems and impaired combustion efficiency. These are symptomatic of serious conditions that cannot be corrected by an oil change. According to one reference, 0.36 percent of total fuel consumption ends up in the crankcase. Problems associated with fuel dilution include:
- Diesel fuel dilution in cold operating conditions can cause waxing. During startup, this can result in low oil pressure and starvation conditions.
- Diesel fuel carries unsaturated aromatic molecules into the motor oil which are pro-oxidants. This can result in a premature loss of base number (loss of corrosion protection) and oxidative thickening of the motor oil, causing deposits and mild starvation.
- Fuel dilution can drop the viscosity of a motor oil from say, a 15W40 to a 5W20. This collapses critical oil film thicknesses, resulting in premature combustion zone wear (piston, rings and liner) and crankcase bearing wear.
- Fuel dilution from defective injectors commonly causes wash-down of oil on cylinder liners which accelerates ring, piston and cylinder wear. It also causes high blow-by conditions and increased oil consumption (reverse blow-by).
- Severe fuel dilution dilutes the concentration of oil additives and hence, diluting their effectiveness.
- Fuel dilution by biodiesel may result in higher than normal problems compared to diesel refined by crude stock. These problems include oxidation stability, filter plugging issues, deposit formation and volatility resulting in crankcase accumulations.
icsheeple, tommymonza, Lucar and 3 others Thank this. -
At a higher rpm, the injection can happen sooner because the rod will break over before the combustion event has had time to build any pressure. Same as it is with cars and ignition timing, it can happen further before TDC as rpm increases, as it takes a certain amount of time for the fire to get going.tommymonza, Lucar, dannythetrucker and 1 other person Thank this. -
Looks to me all parties are going to get what they deserve; Trucker an education and the suppliers being exposed.
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