dk
Well-Known Member
Very strange explanation for the fire at Burton Waters marina in the YBW news story. The diesel carburettor backfired! New one on me! Never heard of one or of it backfiring.
Ha, ha; diesel engines don't have carburetors.
My BMC 2.2 diesel has a device that looks very much like a carburettor, including a butterfly valve that controls engine speed. It has injectors as would be expected but uses a vacuum take-off downstream of the butterfly. There is no mention of it in the manual, which describes a more conventional arrangement with the speed control at the injection pump.
Perhaps it is one of those notorious emissions-cheating devices? ;-)
Mike.
My BMC 2.2 diesel has a device that looks very much like a carburettor, including a butterfly valve that controls engine speed. It has injectors as would be expected but uses a vacuum take-off downstream of the butterfly. There is no mention of it in the manual, which describes a more conventional arrangement with the speed control at the injection pump.
Not quite.
Same arrangement as the old little Bedford TK 4 cyl lorries.
The throttle pedal is connected to the butterfly (push pedal down to open) and when the butterfly is closed there is lots (ahem, relatively speaking) of vacuum. The vacuum pipe just downstream of the butterfly is connected to a diaphragm on the end of the injector pump. The diaphragm controls the rack in the pump. Vacuum pulls the rack back against a spring to the idle stop. Butterfly open = no pull on diaphragm so spring on rack opens it . Engine off = no vacuum = full throttle - start position.
If the control rod falls off the butterfly (or the vacuum pipe fractures or falls off) then you get full throttle with no governor. If the strangler linkage then falls off - which it usually will because of the increased vibration of the almost runaway engine , it is quite incredible how fast this little 7.5 tonne truck will go, even with a large ice-cream van on the back!
Yes, T-shirt!![]()
Now why didn't anyone else think of that?
(And believe it or not, some diesels -- although nothing likely to have been on the boat in question -- do have carbs). Edit: I see SAPurdie got there first
Some do!
It sounds like an unnecessary complication with a full on fail dangerous mode! Most diesels have seem to have nothing to throttle the airflow and speed control by increasing the fuelling against a spring that is trying to reduce it.