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Sub-50cc Diesel Motor
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Posts: 912
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Location: {Sydney, Australia or Rio, Brazil Ride: Sierra JXi}
Sub-50cc Diesel Motor
Does any one know where i can find a small diesel motor? Something less than (or close to) 50cc and preferably 4 stroke. So far the only thing i have found is RC plane engines which are 2 stroke and need to run on a diesel/ether mix
I am currently looking at making a small 10ft caravan self powered with a 12v system (with one or two 240v inverters for small appliances) The idea is the fridge, freezer and stove run of lpg cylinder whilst one or two deep cycle batteries are charged by solar and wind (300-500w worth of panels) i want to hook up the motor to a small 30-40amp alternator as an auxilary charging unit.
The reason i am looking for the diesel is i am guessing they will run for longer per litre and it let me run it as a duel fuel on vegetable oil. If use something like a motorbike fuel switch to start it on diesel till it warms up then switch to vegestable oil. I figure if i plumb the vegie fuel tank to snake around the motor and exhaust it be at the right vicosity for the pump
I like to keep it as small and light as possible
Most diesel generators i have seen have 400cc plus and weigh 55kgs.
I am currently looking at making a small 10ft caravan self powered with a 12v system (with one or two 240v inverters for small appliances) The idea is the fridge, freezer and stove run of lpg cylinder whilst one or two deep cycle batteries are charged by solar and wind (300-500w worth of panels) i want to hook up the motor to a small 30-40amp alternator as an auxilary charging unit.
The reason i am looking for the diesel is i am guessing they will run for longer per litre and it let me run it as a duel fuel on vegetable oil. If use something like a motorbike fuel switch to start it on diesel till it warms up then switch to vegestable oil. I figure if i plumb the vegie fuel tank to snake around the motor and exhaust it be at the right vicosity for the pump
I like to keep it as small and light as possible
Most diesel generators i have seen have 400cc plus and weigh 55kgs.
-[b]Santos[/b][img]http://www.teamswift.net/images/smilies/icon_furious.gif[/img]
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
We looked for age for a small diesel because we compete in a 24hour economy race call the RACV Energy Breakthrough in Victoria. The smalled diesel we could find was the Yanmar 220cc. These motors are still donks weighing about 25kg or something similar.
Cheers
Slunnie
Discovery TD5, Landy IIa V8 ute.
Slunnie
Discovery TD5, Landy IIa V8 ute.
By the time you go and buy it all, and set it up, you may as well go buy a DECENT small generator. Im not talking about the elcheapo Bunnings or Supercrap ones.
I have a small Honda generator, runs 100-1 2 stroke fuel, 700ml gets me around 5 hrs running. Quiet as, we used to have it running under our camper, and we could still live normally inside. Weighs probably about 8-10 kg. It supplies either 250 or 450 watts of sine wave inverted power depending on the switch position selected, as well as 12v power. I can quite safely run a laptop or other electronic devices straight off it with no problems, although I do use a surge protector, (we run the rear projection TV and set top box at home off it during power outages).
Only drawback is price, it was just under $1000 a few years ago, but I really think it was a great investment, even though it it only gets used a couple of times a year these days, and I wont be getting rid of it.
I have a small Honda generator, runs 100-1 2 stroke fuel, 700ml gets me around 5 hrs running. Quiet as, we used to have it running under our camper, and we could still live normally inside. Weighs probably about 8-10 kg. It supplies either 250 or 450 watts of sine wave inverted power depending on the switch position selected, as well as 12v power. I can quite safely run a laptop or other electronic devices straight off it with no problems, although I do use a surge protector, (we run the rear projection TV and set top box at home off it during power outages).
Only drawback is price, it was just under $1000 a few years ago, but I really think it was a great investment, even though it it only gets used a couple of times a year these days, and I wont be getting rid of it.
Mud makes excellent toothpaste.
I've just moved school, but was with The Kings School in NSW in Hybrids. We run 2 cars, a 2 seater Diesel/Electric called Diesel Demon, and a single seater Petrol/Electric called Lethal Injection (from Haltech engine management on a Honda GX50). An absolutely awesome event isn't it, the kids (and oldies)just love it! Just stunning the backing it gets from the competitors. Last year we won (Lethal Injection) by 70 laps I think it was over the 24 hours and set a new course recorddroopypete wrote:Which team? my daughter rides in the St Margerets HPV team, lots of funSlunnie wrote: we compete in a 24hour economy race call the RACV Energy Breakthrough in Victoria.![]()
Peter.

HPV's! They're kamikazis! Psycho lot, but the seem to have sooooo much fun. There's a lot of ticker on that track!
Cheers
Slunnie
Discovery TD5, Landy IIa V8 ute.
Slunnie
Discovery TD5, Landy IIa V8 ute.
have these.
http://www.waspdiesel.com/generators.html
Your major problem will be DB at places, as diesel motor bang quite a bit.
The inverter ones are pretty good, worth the cash, I've seen a Honda 10i run a 450ltr fridge, B/W CRT TV, little CRT colour TV, a 30inch LCD TV, and running a charger for a battery.
and that wasn't really pushing it apprantly, they throttle up and down so there's as little fuel usage, only goes up when it actually needed.
[/code]
http://www.waspdiesel.com/generators.html
Your major problem will be DB at places, as diesel motor bang quite a bit.
The inverter ones are pretty good, worth the cash, I've seen a Honda 10i run a 450ltr fridge, B/W CRT TV, little CRT colour TV, a 30inch LCD TV, and running a charger for a battery.
and that wasn't really pushing it apprantly, they throttle up and down so there's as little fuel usage, only goes up when it actually needed.
[/code]
The newer Honda gen sets are all much the same. Mine has 2 throttle settings, one outputs 250 watts, and the other 450 watts. Because it is sine wave inverter, it doesnt matter which setting it is on, it still outputs a safe, clean 50hz of power.
We are talking about newer technology here, not the old clunker style gen sets that produce dirty power.
We are talking about newer technology here, not the old clunker style gen sets that produce dirty power.
Mud makes excellent toothpaste.
the generator controller governs the throttle to maintain revs at the specified rpm to meet the power drawn by the load.Chucky wrote:How does it throttle up?
The rev's control the Hz's. So increasing the rev's will inrease the frequency.
If you increase the load on a generator/alternater it will eventualy stall the motor.
swb safari
It uses an alt to feed an invertor .. not like old skool gen sets that had to run at a governed speed to make the waveform.Chucky wrote:How does it throttle up?
The rev's control the Hz's. So increasing the rev's will inrease the frequency.
If you increase the load on a generator/alternater it will eventualy stall the motor.
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
Depending on how you were to set up the charging system, if you have a battery (car) thats fairly low on power, if you were to charge it off an altenator you'd need 3HP minimum. Thats how much an alternator will suck while at maximum output in a "normal" car. Obviously this will be different if your using deep cycle units and a lower amp alternator. Just something for you to concider.
Coxy
Coxy
CheersBundyRumandCoke wrote:The newer Honda gen sets are all much the same. Mine has 2 throttle settings, one outputs 250 watts, and the other 450 watts. Because it is sine wave inverter, it doesnt matter which setting it is on, it still outputs a safe, clean 50hz of power.
We are talking about newer technology here, not the old clunker style gen sets that produce dirty power.
I didn't know they went through a inverter.
My Cruiser is Environmentally Friendly.
It runs on recycled Dinosaurs.
It runs on recycled Dinosaurs.
These all suck for 12V battery charging. 240V - great, battery charging - suck. If you want to charge batteries you want 40-80AMPS, and that needs an alternator based unit like the Christie, or the cheap chinese copies.
The best the honda pushes out is 6A@12V.
Paul
The best the honda pushes out is 6A@12V.
Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Thats if you have a good battery that will stand up to those kind of charge rates ... most "regular" batteries will cook at more than about 10A.me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:Re. both the above - do you want to run it for hours and hours?
14V alternator at 60-80A is a hell of a lot faster than a charger.
Paul
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
Hmm, I don't agree with the above. N70 Wet Cell for $99 from Repco from flat with an 80A alternator at 14.3V will taper charge from 50+ amps initially down to 4 or less when near fully charged. AGM will swallow more than that at 3-4x the cost.love_mud wrote:Thats if you have a good battery that will stand up to those kind of charge rates ... most "regular" batteries will cook at more than about 10A.me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:Re. both the above - do you want to run it for hours and hours?
14V alternator at 60-80A is a hell of a lot faster than a charger.
Paul
Nothing special about a $99 battery.
Alternators are constant voltage charging as opposed to constant current.
Deep cycle however would reflect your statements above.
Paul
Lexus LX470 - hrrm Winter Tyres
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Gone - Cruiser HZJ105 Turbo'd Locked & Lifted
Gone - 3L Surf
Posts: 912
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Location: {Sydney, Australia or Rio, Brazil Ride: Sierra JXi}
240v chargers are no good, i need something that doesn't require a powerpoint.
Trickle charging is ok, it's meant to be a supplementary system, If it runs for 5-6 hours during the day
A small diesel would probably still be torquier than its petrol conterpart so i could put a big pulley on the motor to make the alternator spin faster
Trickle charging is ok, it's meant to be a supplementary system, If it runs for 5-6 hours during the day
A small diesel would probably still be torquier than its petrol conterpart so i could put a big pulley on the motor to make the alternator spin faster
-[b]Santos[/b][img]http://www.teamswift.net/images/smilies/icon_furious.gif[/img]
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
I would take a look at some small wind turbine's ... can be had pretty cheap, and work in even a failry light breeze .. will add power whenever there is wind, no noise, very little maintainence, and supplment some solar panels.Santos wrote:240v chargers are no good, i need something that doesn't require a powerpoint.
Trickle charging is ok, it's meant to be a supplementary system, If it runs for 5-6 hours during the day
A small diesel would probably still be torquier than its petrol conterpart so i could put a big pulley on the motor to make the alternator spin faster
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
How many times do you reckon it would stand up to that ? The thermal cycling wears the plates and sloughs off material .. not ideal for a system like is being discussed here. As the long term power draw would signify a few deep cycle batteries.me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:Hmm, I don't agree with the above. N70 Wet Cell for $99 from Repco from flat with an 80A alternator at 14.3V will taper charge from 50+ amps initially down to 4 or less when near fully charged. AGM will swallow more than that at 3-4x the cost.love_mud wrote:Thats if you have a good battery that will stand up to those kind of charge rates ... most "regular" batteries will cook at more than about 10A.me3@neuralfibre.com wrote:Re. both the above - do you want to run it for hours and hours?
14V alternator at 60-80A is a hell of a lot faster than a charger.
Paul
Nothing special about a $99 battery.
Alternators are constant voltage charging as opposed to constant current.
Deep cycle however would reflect your statements above.
Paul
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
Posts: 912
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 6:29 pm
Location: {Sydney, Australia or Rio, Brazil Ride: Sierra JXi}
solar AND wind will be the main system, this is more along the lines of a week of rainlove_mud wrote:I would take a look at some small wind turbine's ... can be had pretty cheap, and work in even a failry light breeze .. will add power whenever there is wind, no noise, very little maintainence, and supplment some solar panels.Santos wrote:240v chargers are no good, i need something that doesn't require a powerpoint.
Trickle charging is ok, it's meant to be a supplementary system, If it runs for 5-6 hours during the day
A small diesel would probably still be torquier than its petrol conterpart so i could put a big pulley on the motor to make the alternator spin faster
-[b]Santos[/b][img]http://www.teamswift.net/images/smilies/icon_furious.gif[/img]
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
Suzuki, Jeep & Toyota Soft tops with welded seams for SALE (PM me)
Can still be quite windy when it rains :O) .. and a pretty decent UV index as well.Santos wrote:solar AND wind will be the main system, this is more along the lines of a week of rainlove_mud wrote:I would take a look at some small wind turbine's ... can be had pretty cheap, and work in even a failry light breeze .. will add power whenever there is wind, no noise, very little maintainence, and supplment some solar panels.Santos wrote:240v chargers are no good, i need something that doesn't require a powerpoint.
Trickle charging is ok, it's meant to be a supplementary system, If it runs for 5-6 hours during the day
A small diesel would probably still be torquier than its petrol conterpart so i could put a big pulley on the motor to make the alternator spin faster
I would seriously look at a simple yachting genset (yachting sites may be helpful here) something very reliable and quite common ( as I am assuming as you cant get 240v you may be a fair way from civilisation.) You dont want to be stuffing about with custom and potentially quite rare hardware. Or if it is only for backup purposes .. would you use the vehicles electrical power to supplment your living quarters .. ?
" If governments are involved in the covering up the knowledge of aliens, Then they are doing a much better job of it than they do of everything else "
The Smallest diesels I know of are:
Yanmar - 211cc Direct injection 3.8-4.7HP
http://www.yanmar.com.au/industrial/la_ ... series.htm
Kubota OC60 - 276cc Indirect Injection 5.6-7.2HP
Haltech use these in their Icepacks. They buy heaps of them, so could probably do you a good price. Being indirect injection they are quite quiet.
http://www.frontierpower.ca/kubota/actvseries.htm
I havent seen a smaller diesel that is commercially available.
Yanmar - 211cc Direct injection 3.8-4.7HP
http://www.yanmar.com.au/industrial/la_ ... series.htm
Kubota OC60 - 276cc Indirect Injection 5.6-7.2HP
Haltech use these in their Icepacks. They buy heaps of them, so could probably do you a good price. Being indirect injection they are quite quiet.
http://www.frontierpower.ca/kubota/actvseries.htm
I havent seen a smaller diesel that is commercially available.
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