good answers. more responses not neededturbo's are good for melting pistons, no really after reading thousands of mitsubishi , honda, turbododge posts I give up.most often read turbo post: there was a 3 second boost spike and my $500 forged pistons melted.list of gear already in possesion:5 thunderbird turbos, garret t3's .48 ex .63 cp good for about 250 hp ea2 megasquirts4 intercoolers3 2.4L dodge 16 valve motors, one built for turbo 4 2.0 motors5 transmissions1 neon that laughs at me14 440 cc injectors1 laptop1 wideband o2 box$50 takes all gas is $3 a gallon making me not want to drive a 12 mpg turbo car also in possession: a 1.6L na vw diesel not for sale
turbo's are good for melting pistons, no really after reading thousands of mitsubishi , honda, turbododge posts I give up. most often read turbo post: there was a 3 second boost spike and my $500 forged pistons melted.
Where will you put the injector and glow plug in a gas head? How will you start and idle a small diesel with 15:1 compression? The 14 litre 6cyl (900hp, 1500ftlb) cummins that you used as an example in your last post on this subject will not start in the cold with 15:1 compression, it must be plugged in for several hours. A smaller engine with a higher surface area to volume ratio will be significantly worse. You'll have to push it to get it to start, preheat it to near operating temperature or use cases of starting fluid to warm it up like the tractor pullers...
Depends on a lot of variables.......................
Drove an 855 cummins, Big cam 1, 400 horse, about 1100 ft/lbs if memory serves, big holset turbo with 14.5 to 1 compression for a lot of years, about 700,000 miles worth. truck was overfueled about 30% courtesy of John ter Horst. Started okay down to about -5c without being plugged in. Couple hours on the plug at -40. No glow plugs on this engine. Present truck is powered by Perkins, NA 354ci, no glow plugs, 16.5 to 1 compression. Use the "Thermostart" (single glow plug/fuel injector on the intake manifold) almost all the time, wwinter or summer. Need it less if the factory timing is used, but the truck smokes more. Will start down to -30 without beinng plugged in, but doesn't like it!
QuoteDepends on a lot of variables.......................I've gotta call BS on the perkins though. We've had a fair number around, 4.236 and 6.354, both turbo and NA and one thing they cannot be accused of is being terribly eager to start. The "normal" 17.5:1 compression version isn't bad but -30º is out of the question. Haven't had much experience with those "thermostart" things. They are used on most of the T4.236 powered aircraft ground power sets I've worked on but have never had any cause use them. The airports need engines that start, so they keep them plugged in. They must work some kind of great if you can get that 354 to fire at -30...