I work for a large performance diesel manufacturer
Quote from: Kantdrive55I work for a large performance diesel manufacturer Who?BD, Piers(ADP) or Dtt?
Quote from: "DVST8R"Quote from: "Kantdrive55"I work for a large performance diesel manufacturer Who?BD, Piers(ADP) or Dtt?Dont forget you have to call Piers, PDR Diesel now :lol:
Quote from: "Kantdrive55"I work for a large performance diesel manufacturer Who?BD, Piers(ADP) or Dtt?
To be honest, the cylinder pressure issue is only an issue if the methanol content is very high, or if there is an inherent weakness already in place. The water actually lowers the peak pressure slightly, but extends the pressure over a longer period of time, while the methanol does raise the peak pressure a bit. They usually offset each other nicely, but, like on a 6.0 Powerstroke that already has known issues, if it is already on the ragged edge and water-meth is bolted on (or any other power adder at all) and it goes over the edge, the finger is pointed at the last power-adder, not the first, second, or third. If you run 70% methanol, you will get really high pressures and run the risk of diesel knock - which is why we recommend no more than 50/50 mix.
One reason is most likely because pure oxygen auto-ignites in thepresents of petroleum products.
Quote from: hoytOne reason is most likely because pure oxygen auto-ignites in thepresents of petroleum products.i just went out and turned on the oxygen from my torch and aimed it at a cup full of diesel. it didnt auto ignite. i tried it with gas too. again it didnt auto ignite. and to top it off, oxygen cant self ignite in a diesel cylinder because theres no fuel in the cylinder untill tdc, so you could run oxygen and not have auto ignition. on the other hand, i agree with everyone else that oxygen would help create a really hot burn in the cylinder after the injectors did their job. it would probably help burn through pistons like a cutting torch.