Things seldom turn out like we plan, but after two and a half years away from the HMEM forum, it looks like the opportunity to try building a diesel is finally back on. In the first post of the diesel project
https://www.homemodelenginemachinis...-x-66-56-4cc-4-stroke-injector-details.31110/it looks like I wanted to make a 2 stroke, then axed that idea and was going to try a 4 stroke instead. Then a month ago, I got to thinking about diesels again, and in particular, 2 strokes. At that time I had not re-read my post number one. But I was looking at the Detroit Diesel 2 stroke series with the roots blower and got the bug to give it a try. So, I have come back full circle. The 2 stroke is on again, for better or for worse. Hard headed or not.
My interest in diesels goes back to my early 20's when i was working construction and ran across a couple of unusual diesel situations. There was a mechanic for the construction company who had the gift. He could keep just about anything running. I remember he was trying to start a stubborn bull dozer and him yelling at the guy helping him, "No, put the gasoline on a rag and hold it over the air cleaner, don't pour the gas into the cleaner!" Luckily, the engine didn't explode.
They had a diesel powered pile driver for big timber pilings. It was like an inverted cylinder with a solid steel piston about 8" in diameter and 4 feet long fitted into it. To start the hammer, a cable lifted the piston, and then dropped it back into the cylinder with a tiny squirt of diesel fuel at the bottom.If it fired, the piston jumped back up under its own power, and then fell back down as a squirt of diesel was automatically injected to keep the cycle going. Brilliant in its simplicity!
Then, at a job in the Norfolk (VA, USA) shipyard, when ships were in drydock, they hooked up these old 2-stroke diesel generators, salvaged from ships, to power the ships during overhaul. The diesels were blown 2-strokes about 8 feet tall and long, and 3 feet wide. They ran 24 hours a day, sounding like an old Greyhound bus lumbering along. Fond memories.
So here we go on an attempt at continuing attempt number one.... with changes.
Thank you for providing this forum and sharing your knowledge.
Lloyd Sikes
https://www.homemodelenginemachinis...-x-66-56-4cc-4-stroke-injector-details.31110/it looks like I wanted to make a 2 stroke, then axed that idea and was going to try a 4 stroke instead. Then a month ago, I got to thinking about diesels again, and in particular, 2 strokes. At that time I had not re-read my post number one. But I was looking at the Detroit Diesel 2 stroke series with the roots blower and got the bug to give it a try. So, I have come back full circle. The 2 stroke is on again, for better or for worse. Hard headed or not.
My interest in diesels goes back to my early 20's when i was working construction and ran across a couple of unusual diesel situations. There was a mechanic for the construction company who had the gift. He could keep just about anything running. I remember he was trying to start a stubborn bull dozer and him yelling at the guy helping him, "No, put the gasoline on a rag and hold it over the air cleaner, don't pour the gas into the cleaner!" Luckily, the engine didn't explode.
They had a diesel powered pile driver for big timber pilings. It was like an inverted cylinder with a solid steel piston about 8" in diameter and 4 feet long fitted into it. To start the hammer, a cable lifted the piston, and then dropped it back into the cylinder with a tiny squirt of diesel fuel at the bottom.If it fired, the piston jumped back up under its own power, and then fell back down as a squirt of diesel was automatically injected to keep the cycle going. Brilliant in its simplicity!
Then, at a job in the Norfolk (VA, USA) shipyard, when ships were in drydock, they hooked up these old 2-stroke diesel generators, salvaged from ships, to power the ships during overhaul. The diesels were blown 2-strokes about 8 feet tall and long, and 3 feet wide. They ran 24 hours a day, sounding like an old Greyhound bus lumbering along. Fond memories.
So here we go on an attempt at continuing attempt number one.... with changes.
Thank you for providing this forum and sharing your knowledge.
Lloyd Sikes