love ke70 wrote:what do you mean you TD hasnt seen diesel in two years?
you running a diesel on straight petrol or have i missed a step?
Nah, dude's running three Hiclones.
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Yes - 15% is what I got3.8BUNDY wrote:So to simplify things for the not so technical or those that simply don't care about the technical side of things (ME).
I am seriuosly looking at doing this to my GQ td42 (after market) which is also used to tow a comp rig.
I will get
more power?
cleaner engine?
Small fuel savings?
a bill for about $2500 after rebate?
does this sound about right?
If you aren't turbo'd then it'll do nothing for power.3.8BUNDY wrote:So to simplify things for the not so technical or those that simply don't care about the technical side of things (ME).
I am seriuosly looking at doing this to my GQ td42 (after market) which is also used to tow a comp rig.
I will get
more power?
cleaner engine?
Small fuel savings?
a bill for about $2500 after rebate?
does this sound about right?
Thanks JKJK wrote:Yes - 15% is what I got3.8BUNDY wrote:So to simplify things for the not so technical or those that simply don't care about the technical side of things (ME).
I am seriuosly looking at doing this to my GQ td42 (after market) which is also used to tow a comp rig.
I will get
more power?
cleaner engine?
Small fuel savings?
a bill for about $2500 after rebate?
does this sound about right?
Yes
Yes
I'd shoot for about $3K after rebate.
Just double check that it's the gastek one with the Sequent II.3.8BUNDY wrote:Thanks JKJK wrote:Yes - 15% is what I got3.8BUNDY wrote:So to simplify things for the not so technical or those that simply don't care about the technical side of things (ME).
I am seriuosly looking at doing this to my GQ td42 (after market) which is also used to tow a comp rig.
I will get
more power?
cleaner engine?
Small fuel savings?
a bill for about $2500 after rebate?
does this sound about right?
Yes
Yes
I'd shoot for about $3K after rebate.
Diesal gas at penrith quoted $4750 (Rebate to be deducted) as they have to do an exhaust alteration on lwb GQ.
I'm pretty sure it is the same system you have installed.
From what it shows on that website it looks extremely basic compared to the gastek system. In my opinion you can easily see where the extra $800 goes with the electronic injection / engine management on the gastek setup.3.8BUNDY wrote:got another price from ace diesal gas conversions at Girraween.
He installed the system in my dads 80 ser and a few of his club mates vehicles. About $800 cheaper but I have to find out more about the 2 systems to compare (the non technical guy has to get technical)
My dad and his mates are totally wrapped in their set ups, to the point where he won't shut up about it.
Why do you say diesels can't create enough heat to ignite lpg? The dedicated propane engines cummins/westport make have a CR of 9:1, their CNG version runs 10:1, the B series diesel it's based on runs ~18:1.bowtie landie wrote: Diesel engine compression does not create enough heat to ignite LPG so preignition can not occur. Compression ignites the diesel which in turn ignites the LPG. LPG is not a cataylist as it is consumed in the reaction - more like an accellerant. It increases the burn rate so that the diesel is burnt more completely before the exhaust valve opens - hence less black smoke, more power & better economy etc.
bowtie landie wrote:(Auto ignition of a fuel is the temperature at which it will spontaneously ignite in a normal atmosphere without an external source of ignition, such as a flame or spark.)
The auto ignition temperatue for automotive LPG is between 500 and 600 degrees Celcius. Auto ignition temperature for automotive diesel is approximately 210 degrees Celcius. A diesel engine with between 17 & 22:1 compression ratio will typically have compression temperatures of 370-400 degrees Celcius - nowhere near enough to ignite the LPG.
Since the LPG is in mixture with the air, the flame front from the diesel spreads more quickly, and more completely, including igniting the air/fuel mixture which is in contact with the cylinder walls, which are cool in comparison to the super-heated air inside the combustion chamber. Much of the cleaner burning of the fuel is attributed to this ignition against the "cooler" components of the engine, and accounts for raising the percentage of combustion from a typical 75% for a well-tuned diesel engine running on pure diesel fuel alone, to 90-95% with the addition of LPG.
The attached link (I hope it works - you may have to copy it into the address bar) is about a Mercedes truck converted to run on LPG. The report was from the news room of LPG Australia in May 2008.
The compression has been lowered with a swirl plate and the head has been modified to accept spark plugs.
http://www.pressroom.com.au/press_relea ... &prID=3581
Hope this helps.
Peter K.
Fleet saving, not fuel saving. To fully recognise what this means we need to know what percentage of total fleet cost goes to fuel.love ke70 wrote:but that link doesnt really seem like a big technology breakthrough..
10% fleet saving, when LPG is under half the price, it must be chewing through some gas, i wonder how many litres theyre carrying....
The autoignition point of lpg is approx 450-500C, pull up the MSDS from your local gas supplier and they will tell you exactly what it is for their mix.bowtie landie wrote:(Auto ignition of a fuel is the temperature at which it will spontaneously ignite in a normal atmosphere without an external source of ignition, such as a flame or spark.)
The auto ignition temperatue for automotive LPG is between 500 and 600 degrees Celcius. Auto ignition temperature for automotive diesel is approximately 210 degrees Celcius. A diesel engine with between 17 & 22:1 compression ratio will typically have compression temperatures of 370-400 degrees Celcius - nowhere near enough to ignite the LPG.
Since the LPG is in mixture with the air, the flame front from the diesel spreads more quickly, and more completely, including igniting the air/fuel mixture which is in contact with the cylinder walls, which are cool in comparison to the super-heated air inside the combustion chamber. Much of the cleaner burning of the fuel is attributed to this ignition against the "cooler" components of the engine, and accounts for raising the percentage of combustion from a typical 75% for a well-tuned diesel engine running on pure diesel fuel alone, to 90-95% with the addition of LPG.
The attached link (I hope it works - you may have to copy it into the address bar) is about a Mercedes truck converted to run on LPG. The report was from the news room of LPG Australia in May 2008.
The compression has been lowered with a swirl plate and the head has been modified to accept spark plugs.
http://www.pressroom.com.au/press_relea ... &prID=3581
Hope this helps.
Peter K.
I've uploaded the video here:bowtie landie wrote:Hi KiwiBacon, I'm interested in having a look at the video - we haven't come across this before. In a vehicle last week we had forgotten to close off the idle circuit on a converter and you could smell the gas out of the exhaust at idle - but it ran smooth.
My information shows autoignition temperatures of LPG to be much higher than your information - so I will review and confirm - although am very confident in the figures. Combustion temperatures of 650 seem unusually high and in this situation pre-ignition could occur and adding LPG would be foolish, however I would be looking to see why the temperatures were so high.
PM sent - thanks
Peter K
It is really quite simple. LPG can vary from ~100% propane to about 60%.bowtie landie wrote:
My information shows autoignition temperatures of LPG to be much higher than your information - so I will review and confirm
RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
What engine are you running?love ke70 wrote:i can do that with the D-GAS system, just earth the hobbs switch so it thinks its seeing boost, and it will knock a couple of times and the idle comes up to 1200rpm or so from 700, and runs smooth as a whistle...
but other cars do knock...
what exactly where u trying to prove with that test?
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