DIY Remote Start and Remote Shutdown generator control.

You may have read the post about the transfer switch we wired at Zach’s house?

https://www.utterpower.com/installing-a-generator-transfer-switch-at-zachs-house-21211/

And it’s possible you read the post about the Urban Air Cooled Generator

https://www.utterpower.com/utterpowers-urban-backup-prototype-headed-to-a-new-test-site-soon/

As fo Feb 21, I’ve done quite a bit of experimenting and we’re close to doing the actual install where we tie all of this together.  If you have an electrical or electronic background, you’ll easily follow the wiring scheme. As I had mentioned before, the install is simplified because we only need deliver 120VAC to our transfer switch as there really aren’t any 240 VAC circuits we need to power in this house.

We’ll run three 10 gauge conductors between the generator and the transfer switch and main breaker panel.. (less than 40 foot run)  Hot, Neutral, and Ground. Along with those three, we will run a piece of CAT5 in the same plastic conduit for other functions,  one will be a battery lead from the 12 volt start battery in the generator cabinet, this is used for three purposes, one is a battery voltage monitor, two is a method to trickle charge the battery, and a third is to activate the relay controlled functions in the cabinet.  The run switch at the remote panel activates the fuel valve to open position.  The momentary push button activates the motorized decompressor, The momentary start button operates the starter. The decompressor is all about being kind to the starter and making it last longest and assuring we can start the set with a poorly charged battery if necessary. We have spare wires for added functions, but one lead sounds an alarm inside the house to report abnormal conditions, we can also add other functions like over temp, no lube oil pressure and more to shut the fuel off.

Today I added insulation to the cabinet to control noise, and tested the muffler modification. For those of you who remember the Olds 442, you may remember it had no muffler. Instead, Oldsmobile used an exhaust pipe that had accordion like pleats from the exhaust header darned near to the tail pipe. It was fairly quiet at idle.  I have a flexible exhaust pipe that screws into a pipe thread exhaust tip-off the stock muffler, the other end goes into a box full of fine mesh screen that acts like a diffuser. Since the pipe is stainless, it should last a lifetime.

Expect pictures and maybe a video or two during installation..

Posted in DIYer Generator | Tagged , | 5 Comments

A_New_Idea?_Really?

We’ve all seen those crazy posts. A lot of them are full of the “I did this or that.” I’ve recently seen claims that someone has a new patent on a simple pulley, or even the wheel! As I’ve mentioned, go to a really good farm show and you’ll be suprised by all the 100 year old ideas.

Here’s one that was brought to my attention last week.. you might have thought Daisy had the first repeater?

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Noise, Air Cooled Diesels

Many of us have noted there’s some small air cooled diesels for sale in the USA. I’m dumbfounded the EPA has allowed it, but best we consider them while we can get one. Air cooled is likely the way to go IF you have to lug it around. But there’s no comparison between the diesels I’ve hefted and the gasoline engines of equal horsepower. you’ll want a friedn’s help to lug the 10hp Yanmar clone further than across the room.. add a frame and a generator, they you’ll want help from one of your sturdy friends.

What I’m most curious about right now, is how quiet can you make a Yanmar clone, what are the sources of the noise and what efforts pay the biggest dividends in noise reduction? Zach’s house has been wired with a transfer switch, the CF186 and the PMG will be the source of back up power, the cabinet will be insulated and reduce some of the noise, but the beast presently makes more noise than I care to listen to.  Due to the fan design, the cooling fins are shorter, and likely make less noise than a motorcycle engine and the stock muffler may be a large contributor, first step is to prove this with a secondary muffler and use a DB meter to prove the benefit.

If you have experience in noise reduction of small air cooled diesels, you comments would be most appreciated.

Due to a lot of factors, it’s hard to know where all these Yanmar clones are being made. I get reports from owners of those assembled by the Changfa plant, but we’re not even sure that all the engines with Changfa names on them were assembeled there! So far, the ones running at 3000 or less seem to be providing good service, but no one I know has anything like 6000 hours on them, and if you use the new EPA approved oil which is void of antiwear agents, and anti corrosion agents, you should expect a short life… so I think…

George B.

Posted in Generator Realities | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

Head Stud Fastener Torque in the Lister Clones

Yikes! Have you ever looked at these Fasteners closely?

I’m not sure how many I’ve looked at but far more than most people I’d imagine. Rajkot makes a pretty crude Nut, last ones I was looking at had threads pulled and a quarter of a thread tore loose and hanging out of the bottom of one of them.  You guessed it, making this nut close to right would take a few more machine steps, and it’s also possible that some who make them don’t know that a simple chamfer could protect the threads from pulling.

My Advice is to look at these head stud nuts closely, if they’re really bad, you’ll Find that there are nuts at the hardware store that match the threads per inch, and the size as closely as the originals do. I chamfer the bottoms, and I use a belt sander to round the edge all the way around the bottom, so the sharp edge doesn’t dig into the head and give a false torque reading.  I sometimes find the bottom side so rough and ugly, I clean it up on the belt sander as well. 

Once I’ve done this, I rub an anti seize into the bottoms, and I coat the head studs with same and wipe off the excess. After I clean up the head surface, and the top of the block, I check the cylinder liner for the proper protrusion above the deck (often .010″)  I place a new head gasket put 30 WT lube oil on the nuts, and incrementally go around with a cresent wrench and get things fairly tight before I grab my torque wrench and set it for 140 Foot pounds. I like to run the machine at full load 2800-3000 watts at sea level until the engine is soaked warm.  Allow the engine to cool over night and retorque to 140 foot pounds again.

If you look at the galling on the bottom of some of the head nuts, it’s easy to believe that whatever the the last guy saw on the torque wrench (if  ever used) was way off.  Breaking those extremely sharp edges is going to make a world of difference. We all hear about leaking head gaskets, I do believe following these steps will eliminate one source of trouble.

George B.      

             

Posted in Generators | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Example of the West’s unwillingness to learn from history?

Pirates and the entire trade is built on ransom payments…. it is an interesting topic of study, and it might be an example of why you shouldn’t trust your Government to take care of you. If they can’t get this right, why would you trust them with other matters?

What a fortunate Pirate, free food, medical, dental, housing and meals all at your expense for the next 30 years.  How many of his Countrymen dream of a life so grand? Might this be the very first time he’s ever watched color TV, or had a good roof over his head? Where will he go when he gets out of prison? Who would bet against him being out in five years and moving onto the public assistance roles for the rest of his life? 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703373404576148393224867726.html

Most of us who have studied Pirates of the past know we should have left this leader right where he was, in the water with a good distance to swim to shore. The West pays Ransom, runs fleets of ships with no security and is totally responsible for building a thriving Pirate trade. The West seems totally incapable of adapting or forming any kind of intelligent response.

An example of an intelligent response? Almost anything would be smarter than this..

Posted in Your Wasted Tax Dollars | Tagged , | 7 Comments

Question of the Day 2-16-11

I know you’ve been having problems getting good magnets.  Have you given up on that or are you thinking you’ll get a few more PMG’s built?  I’m guessing it’s one you’ve had for a while.  If the engine I’m looking at turns out to be good, I’ll be looking for a generator.  My father in law has an electric motor shop and he and I have plans to experiment with the asynchronous motor turned driven to be a generator.  I bought the book from you about it but he and I have a few different ideas.  I hope I have more info to add for the DIY community.  I will want a generator though for when there is no grid power…or perhaps no electronics because of EMP.  With the Muslim uprisings around the world…this too may be coming soon to a country near you!

Jeff

My answer:   Jeff,

Few people understand how serious problems are in China. They need a very high growth rate in the economy to make ends meet, and it appears that signals from the top in some cases push production regardless of QC. The magnets we are seeing right now are  examples of  ‘top down’ pressure to produce products at least cost. As I have mentioned, making quality magnets that are properly matched as per flux density is tedious work, and it must be done by people who care about what they do.

I would bet my house there’s a bean counting manager who has the authorority to over rule technical management. I can see their visit in my mind’s eye. They visit the production line, note that the morons are taking all day to mix dirt and press it into magnets. Of course the bean counter knows that simple farmers know dirt best, so he fires all the technicians and brings in Peasants to work at one fifth the cost. After all.. he knows a magnet is a magnet, and he thinks it passes the test if it sticks to the fridge.

China has operated in ‘top down’ mode for how many years? Remember when Mao was the voice of God? He ordered Peasants to be armed with pellet guns, and every bird to be shot.. They were eating too much of China’s food crops he thought.

China has lessons to learn, while the USA seems unable to lean that we can’t give every Federal and State employee twice the wages of the private sector, free health care, and a $100,000 pension, they need learn that if they continue to make junk, people will sooner or later quit buying Chinese all together.

Some of the horizontal engines out of China were made to sell, not run. If you look at the worst of them, you’ll find bushings in place of ball bearing in places where significant radial loads are found.. example might be a 195 on the balance shafts. Missing pieces like oil pressure regulator, etc.

We Americans don’t seem to have the courage to hold our elected officials accountable. The Chinese people have more of an excuse… they don’t have the influence to do more than go along with the current program. Muslims are a small problem compared to those who get elected by promising the impossible and Americans foolish enough to believe it.

As for PMGs, I just don’t know how long it will take for China to learn the lesson. I have heard that no one trusts China to make magnets for the hybrid cars.. true or false, I just don’t know. Canada claims to have found some rare earth, we’ll see if they sell it all to the Chinese the way Australia purportedly did..

G

Posted in Generator Realities | Tagged , , , | 2 Comments

A ‘Heads Up’ from Texas ‘Rolling Blackouts’

 Depending on others could be a bad idea

over-our-heads

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You may be aware of the rolling blackouts across Texas and New Mexico, but you may not be aware of all the problems home owners were faced with, and the repairs they’ll have to make.

http://kutnews.org/post/texas-power-outages-caused-7000-megawatts-going-offline

Many of us believe it all starts with the new mentality that if it hasn’t happened in the last 20 years, then there’s no requirement to prepare for it. Fact is, many Americans and Corporations appear to think the FEDs are responsible to help repair the mess and property damage created by the lack of preparedness of individuals and corporations!

Imagine, some cooler air comes into Texas and New Mexico and they experience temperatures about 15F on average cooler than normal, and this keeps generating capacity off line, and unable to cover the cooler dip!  It just wasn’t that long ago, that our Fathers and Grand-Fathers were prepared, they knew that anything that had happened in the last 200 years or more years could happen again, and they also knew that there wasn’t going to be anyone there to save their dumb asses, so they were prepared for anything.  This is a perfect example of how things really are, 99 percent of the population were certain the Power Companies were responsible enough to have their equipment winterized, and ready for a cold spell. Fact is, they weren’t, but it’s far worse than that, reports I got from some folks in New Mexico is they lost Natural Gas to many homes and commercial buildings and since a lot of people were seeing temps well below zero F, it took very little time for water pipes to freeze and a lot of damage to occur.  Some reports indicate that the natural gas pumping stations were totally dependent on the power grid, and the natural gas suppliers have no standby generators or engine powered back up pumps to keep the gas flowing when there is a grid outage! If there is a lesson to be learned here, it will be forgotten in a year or two by 99% of the population. Hopefully DIYers will remember the lesson.

We live in a new age when society has made every excuse for failure, there are few expectations of individuals or even corporations to manage their own affairs and assure they can take care of their responsibilities as we might see them.  Fact is there are often penalities for Corporations who choose to be more responsible. An example might be a big fat pension plan. The Plan Manager might realize that the economy could dip, and earnings might take a huge tumble (like right now), but if the Corporation holds too much in the pension fund, Raiders could seize a portion of the pension assets to fund their takeover! Thank your Government for this. Pension funds can fail because your Government won’t let a pension fund run flush enough to get through hard times. You also know that FDIC insured means ‘you the taxpayer’ picks up the tab, govenment does not make money, they consume it. 

 We all know.. if we want to make the situation even worse, give it to the Government!  In closing I think I have a great idea, have you been to the hardware store lately? have you noticed that even a small steel washer is 3 cents or more? Why is the federal government still making pennies! Let’s lobby to give up the Penny and adopt a steel flat washer as our smallest coin, they’re worth three or more times what a Penny is, they’re likely cheaper to make and we can always find a use for them!

George B.

Posted in Alternative Energy Sources | Tagged , , | 7 Comments

Installing A Generator Transfer Switch at Zach’s House. 2/12/11

Zach says… Let’s make it easy, so Elmo can do it..  

Zach wants a standby generator

My first choice for a transfer switch allows you to transfer four to six different loads over to the generator VS moving the whole breaker box off the commercial grid and onto the generator. I find people get into big trouble with the bulk transfer switches, and a lot of people learn the hard way as to what they shouldn’t do.  Some who know and like the term ‘whole house generator’ are inexperienced and they might tell you they’d do it differently next time.  My approach to getting through an outage is to get through with reasonable comfort, not live with every convenience. Load management is pretty easy, and simple relay logic can automatically strip (kill) other loads when a hard to start load runs (a well pump is a typical example).   People learn in a hurry that some loads are hard to start but once running, the generator can easily carry them and more.

In Zach’s house, we will be using a six circuit transfer switch, and one or all can be transferred back and forth from commercial to the generator power.

The house breaker panel is near ideally located on the east wall of the garage (front of the house facing south). The builder  installed the electrical service boxed in a ‘raceway’ so the circuit panel is really easy to run gen wiring to.  We’ll be able to bring in a dedicated generator cable from outside, up the raceway and directly into the panel or the transfer switch with little effort.  The goal is to be able to monitor the generator performance from any live plug in in the house with a Kill A WATT, and to be able to start it and transfer loads to the Generator from the breaker panel in the garage.

This house uses natural gas for hot water heating, for the kitchen stove top, and for a gas fireplace in the family room.  The natural gas furnace needs 120 VAC only for the blower motor, there’s only two 240 VAC loads in the whole house, one is for the electric clothes dryer, one is for a kitchen oven.  Lee and and Dana (Zach’s Mom and Dad) developed their priority list, they decided they’d cook in the microwave, or on the natural gas stove top, and the Clothes Dryer was just not all that important of load when the power is out.

 Six Circuits will provide essentials and many conveniences while on the generator, and making changes in priority will be easy if they decide to do so later.

In this case, the transfer switch was mounted up against the left side of the raceway with the bottom of the surface mounted transfer switch even with the bottom of the circuit panel cover, this gave the appearance of symmetry, and the transfer panel and the circuit panels are level with one another making it look like there was a plan when it was installed.  There are eight wires total that run from the transfer switch, two wires each for six circuits, plus a ground and a neutral wire. All eight of these wires run through a piece of metal conduit about two inches showing from the bottom of the transfer switch through the side of the raceway and then up through the bottom of the main breaker panel.

Each circuit has a red wire, and a black wire. In our case, we chose a Reliance brand transfer switch, and I found the best price to be though Amazon even after paying our high State Sales Tax. I believe I saved about $50 over the local Home Depot price, but I didn’t get the DVD, nor did I get a remote box to put a generator plug in, but I didn’t need for this install. All the info on the DVD is also on line, so no loss there.

reliance-trans_switch

The small picture to the left shows watt meters, and that round plug to the right doesn’t have to be mounted when you don’t need it. If you are curious, the watt meters use a current transformer, the generator’s hot wire passes through the center of the small current transformer. Notice the ganged together breaker in the center, this is for a 240 VAC circuit, and if you don’t need it, just take the metal tie off the two center transfer switches and use them as individual 120 VAC transfers.

Installing the transfer switch is a snap, you’ll run the heavy neutral wire (white)  to the neutral bus bar, and the green wire to the ground bus which in most cases will be the neutral bus when it’s the main breaker panel as it is in this install. Once these are made. look for the red and black wires with the letter “A” on them. Turn off the breaker you’ve identified, and remove the breaker, with a screw driver, loosen the screw and remove the circuit wire going to the breaker.  Strip the red wire, insert the stripped end into the breaker and tighten the screw, now take the black wire, and strip it, and use the correct size wire nut to tie the circuit wire and the black wire marked “A” together. Always tug on the wires after you get them in the wire nut, and prove a good connection. Replace the breaker, dress the wires neatly back against the sides of the box, and turn the breaker back on.  Make sure that the A switch on the Gen transfer switch is in the ‘line’ position (down).

Reliance Transfer Switch Typical-Installation

NOTE: There are folks that strip wires with diagonal pliers, side cutters, knives, and other things. When you are installing a $250-$300 transfer switch, you will buy or borrow a quality stripper and you will use the correct gauge hole!  Nicking solid wire is not smart, as for stranded, you want every strand to be whole and none nicked or cut. If you are guessing at gauge, start with the bigger hole and work down till you are able to remove all the insulation.

With the “A” circuit done, Identify the next breaker on your priority list, and find the RED and Black leads marked “B” from the gen transfer, repeat the steps till you’ve got all six circuits wired. If you are carless, if you want to work with higher safety.. open the main breaker and do your work on a dead box.  A lot of experienced hands will check out each circuit as they go, and catch errors as they go.

Once you get all six circuits wired in, and all six circuits switched down to ‘Line’,  you can use the breaker panel and circuits as normal. The next step will be to wire in the generator, and that might be on another day, so this is a good place to stop.

Do take note that we are doing this particular install with 120VAC circuits only, and that allows us to wire our generator for 120 VAC only operation.  There is a big advantage as we need not worry about balancing the load on our generator, the stator windings will be wired in parallel, and we will need run only three wires between the generator and the transfer switch. these will be a white for Neutral, a green for Ground, and a Black or RED for the hot wire (120VAC).

One mistake people make a lot of the time is setting up a generator wrong as per grounds WHEN it is wired into a main panel as this one is.  At the generator you will drive a ground rod, and tie it to the generator frame. YOU WILL NOT tie the neutral and ground together at the generator head as this will violate our grounding plan.  A neutral is designed to carry normal current, a ground is designed to carry fault current only. If you were to strap neutral and ground together at the generator end, AND the panel end, you are effectively running without a ground.

As we think about this run between the generator and home breaker panel, we also think about remote start, low oil pressure alarms, and other items. In our case, we are installing an electric start generator, we will run a number of control leads, and a small battery lead back to the generator start battery so we can trickle charge the battery. With this in place, we can place a small light near the panel powered by the generator battery so we might use it to see our switches, monitor alarm lights, and starter switch. Whatever leads we run will be placed inside conduit between the bottom of the raceway, through to the outside wall, and to the generator set.  Pictures will be added to this page as we progress with the install.

Here’s some drawings done quickly in ‘paint’ to show you exactly how the transfer works.

Ckt Breaker

Ckt Breaker

Above: Here’s one circuit in that big panel, but they’re all the same in this case,  The circuit breaker is what feeds the individual circuits in the house, the black wire leaves the breaker and powers a specific circuit or circuits in your house.  Now look at the next drawing to see how we add the transfer switch to the circuit above.

Transfer Switch in normal position for ‘LINE’ side operation

In this drawing, you can see that we just put our transfer switch in series with the breaker and the wire that feeds our individual circuit we wanted to power from the generator. Note that the transfer switch acts like a ‘pass through’ when it’s in the normal commercial or ‘grid’ power position.

Zach’s installation is a work in progress, expect more to be added to this post.  In my opinion, this is a fairly easy job. Popping the breakers one at a time can allow you to do all the work on a hot box if you are careful.  Any worries on your part about becoming dead from electrocution can be set aside by killing the main breaker, just work on the project dead.  Outside of killing yourself, beginners make mistakes by improperly stripping wires, (cuting into the copper) leaving connections loose, like not tightening the breaker screw tight enough, or not using the proper sized wire nut for the gauge size and number of wires joined.  Always look to assure both bare ends are equal in length, and fully inserted into the wire nut before twisting them together.  Double check your work, and remember loose connections can ruin appliances and even start a fire.  This is an easy job,  Zach and Elmo could likely do it after they read this post, and the instructions that are found on line for the Reliance Transfer Switch.

For those who read this far, it’s very important that you use a quality screw driver bit to loosen the screws on circuit breakers, newer ones have more positive fasteners that can take a little more torque when you try to loosen something that was over tightened when installed.  If the screw is a standard slot, use a brand new quality screw driver bit, and make sure you are square and at the bottom of the slot before you attempt to remove it! When you strip that screw head off, you’ll be going to the hardware store to find another breaker, and you’ll hope they have your brand.

When you are pricing a transfer switch, think about the cost of the quality SPDT switches and  circuit breakers and the other pieces that are often included, it may be false economy to attempt to build one.  There are other solutions out there, one is an interlock system that you can get for your house breaker panel, it creates an interlock system where your main breaker must be off, before you activate another breaker to feed your main panel.  A potential problem with an interlock system is the difference between a circuit breaker and a switch.  In some jurisdictions, the circuit breaker MUST be rated for use as a switch, (they may be more expensive) and opening the main circuit breaker and using another breaker to feed the panel may be illegal unless it meets this rating.  It’s best that we assure that every part of the job meets every electrical code in your area.  Part of the code is to have every breaker labeled.  Another sign of unprofessional work is when wires are found entering a ragged hole in the metal box,  you need an approved grommet. You want your job to be 100 percent legal.

Study your needs prior to the install

Before  installing the typical interlock system,  turn off every breaker and verify all the plugs lights, and appliances it feeds. It’s very handy to make yourself a note book for the generator with this informaiton in it. The first position transfer switch might include the lights in the garage if that’s where your transfer switch is.  The second might be lights in the kitchen, and dining area.  The third is often the family room, where entertainment and news is available, this is often the gathering place during outages.  The following transfer switch position might be the bathroom on the main floor.  

Do a good job of marking panels, and what the switches feed.  Turn them on in order, and watch to assure you do not exceed the rated load of the generator.  

Some people forget the sequence of events, and the person that knows the operation is not always there when the back up generator is needed,  this is the reason you need a simple set of instructions above the transfer switch.

Step one.  Assure that none of the transfer switches are in the generator position.

Step two.  start the generator after verifying fuel, lube oil, and more.

Step three, verify frequency and  voltage from generator.

Step four, Stat Generator, let it wwarm up, Start transfering loads from commercial power to the generator one by one and watch the load.  

The generator transfer switchs are more fool proof, and it’s more difficult to make a mistake compared to the bulk transfer switch.  Of course that’s my opinion, and I could easily write a book as to why. Part of the reason is it allows us to make use of a smaller generator with more certainty that we won’t overwhelm the generator. Larger generators burn a lot of fuel, one of the more popular strategies of getting through an outage is to conserve the fuel you have on hand.  To blaze through all your fuel half way through the outage and sit in the dark for a day or two is no fun, but you won’t be able to claim you were the first to do it..      

It’s always smart to start out with a consulting session, Zach says “Make it easy for Elmo to do it.”

If you live down South where Air conditioning is ‘a must’ part of the year, your approach may be very different than what we typically do up North.  No matter what your requirements are, it all starts with a priority list of items you want to power during an outage.  Most of us think about where we huddle during a storm or hurricane, we may want lights there, and of course we’ll want the TV, radio, our WIFI router, and our telephone to work.  Cell phone chargers are normally a high priority. It passes time to have the news about how bad things are out there, if the local gas station is without power, you won’t venture out to get fuel there.  Being able to make hot/cold drinks, soup, and of course to keep the stuff in the fridge from spoiling are normally high on the priority list.

We might have a natural gas or propane furnace, hot water heater, or fireplace, will they work without electricity? Are there electric igniters or blowers that must work in order to use them? These loads may be higher priority as well.

Another important load is the well pump if you have one, and what about some plug ins in the kitchen, overhead kitchen lights, maybe even the light in the master bedroom and the bathroom light? Here’s where the transfer switch can come in real handy with a small generator, some generators just barely start a well pump, and you need to know your generator will do that BEFORE you buy it! Monitoring the voltage with an inexpensive  KILL A WATT is a good way to see how that pump starts. Stripping off all the loads, starting the pump by itself, allowing a pressure tank to fill, and then turning off the pump Is a viable solution, once the pump is off, you turn the other load back on.

The bravest of married men will make a priority list on their own, if you have a women in the house, it’s wise to get her input of priorities, .. especially if she is going to cook your meals, but if she wants her electric clothes dryer, and electric hot water heater to run at the same time during a power outage, it may be cheaper to just divorce Her than buy that big generator, and the fuel you’ll burn might be a shock..

Following are other articles about the generator install at Zach’s House.

https://www.utterpower.com/zachs-remote-start-generator/

https://www.utterpower.com/developing-a-users-guide-for-zachs-remote-start-stand-by-urban-generator/

https://www.utterpower.com/zach-asks-is-your-generator-ready-for-winter/

 

more to follow, so come back and visit.

George B.

 

 

 

 

Posted in DIYer Generator | Tagged , , , , , , | 12 Comments

Is this the logical power plant for the Hybrid Autos?

MIT says the compression ignition engine will remain one of the most efficient portable power plants for years to come.

Here’s an interesting one, but like most ideas,  there have been engines of similar design in the past, but the note made about this one having less thermal and frictional losses is interesting. A light weight diesel with higher efficiency?

Opposed Piston Opposed Cylinder Engine Video

Thanks to Bill R. for sharing this link.

G

Posted in Engines | 1 Comment

Something New? Small verticle twin diesels

I’ve noticed some new offerings in small verticle twin diesel engines from about 22hp on down to 4,5 and 6 hp. These look very similiar to horizontal engines already in the county, and they are targeted for the lawn mower industry. We know ethanol blends are causing a lot of trouble in mowers, and I’m wondering  if there won’t be a ton of diesel lawn mowers for sale soon?

I found a number of examples (all chinese) at the moment by googling  ‘verticle shaft diesel’.

Posted in Small Diesels | Tagged | 1 Comment