MossRoad
Super Moderator
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2001
- Messages
- 57,924
- Location
- South Bend, Indiana (near)
- Tractor
- Power Trac PT425 2001 Model Year
So what are you saying? 25hp isn't 25hp?
"We don't have GDI SCUT/CUT engines yet because they would require Alien technology and we haven't received them yet from the gods"
The term we need is tractability. ... Analogous to area under the horsepower curve. Thats where diesels shine ... other than being able to work at their peak longer than a gas engine.
Where has logic gone on this thread?
I'm amazed at how this thread has failed to police itself of the quality of information TBN is normally known for.
Lets start wirh an easy one . . the price of diesel/fuel oil.
1. The price of diesel is down in big ways from just 13 months ago because oil across the globe is no longer a shortage product. The technology for finding and developing has plummeted in price and escalated in capability. As a result we've seen a paradigm shift at the same level of the original diesel engine switching from kerosene fuel to diesel for use.
2. China was by far the largest consumer/user of diesel during a 12 year period of artificial growth from artificial construction that is not sustainable. That transition reverse started 1 year ago and has continued to reduce ever since at a very rapid pace.
3. The quality of oil now developing in the US market has dramatically changed and improved thanks to the newest Bakken shale discoveries. Literally stated . . some of the newest discoveries have no match in other areas of the world in terms of quality of oil. You can expect that diesel capabilities and engine builders will be further improving performance and environmental benefit as the next few years progress by leaps and bounds.
The three points above create a radical upcoming change in the benefits and uses of petro fuels in the US. Diesel will be a huge benefitter as this developes and future "tier xx" choices will take great advantage of it.
Meanwhile both our enemies and our supposed allies in a number of countries are making great and grand efforts to stop our country from maturing any and all of these opportunities and to financially hurt or crush the firms developing these discoveries.
The concept that winter will return oil to its prior super high price and method . . Is either completely uninformed or intentionally blindingly incorrect to mislead and misdirect opinion.
The US capacity to produce fuels is now stunning and ultra quality developing and our enemies and some of our "allies" will do anything to stop it imo . . including selling at a loss for long periods of time or even worse.
They are operating right now in light highway vehicles, yard equipment and off road recreational vehicles.
Fork truck engines are RPM and power limited so that they last a long time and don't fail. For example, Toyota's current Tier IV 3.0L turbocharged 4-cylinder gasoline engine puts out a max 93hp at 2550rpm. They last a long time because they aren't making much power for their size, and they don't get turned very fast.
Still, that Toyota wouldn't necessarily be a good tractor engine. A Deere 5093E has the same 93hp Net, but it's 4.5L (and turbo-charged) at a similar 2,400rpm....50% larger to get the same net power. That's because it has to be to turn 2,400rpm for hours on end, and last for years on end.
Lol. Lol. Darkblack . . . you really neef to get coordinated with the other gas engine believers because you're telling conflicting stories. One guy tells us a gas engine 35 hp would be the same displacement as my Iseki. But then when I say that a 35 hp gas engine with equivalent cooling capacity would be more expensive to produce . .. then that conversation goes quiet. Now you're telling us another story.
Go out and invent the gas engine for a scut . . because nobody has seen one . . Until then you've got nothing but guesses and weak assumptions.
The term we need is tractability. ... Analogous to area under the horsepower curve. Thats where diesels shine ... other than being able to work at their peak longer than a gas engine.
http://www.pittauto.com/customer/piauel/specpages/FOR DSG_423.pdf
I really like that engine. It is a tough engine with simple controls. I have thought about it's reliable ignition and fuel delivery a lot when looking at older gas tractors. They are cheap to operate more simple to maintain and stout. I have wondered before this thread why something similar has not been in a tractor. It makes it in other equipment well. I just don't think the cut market is as tough and demanding as people want to believe. There are tougher drive applications than a tractor. Gas, LPG, LNG, diesel are all found doing tougher jobs than tilling a garden. I really dont like the direction of emissions right now in diesels and I believe there will be a generation gap in diesel engines. A generation of extremely less desirable engines due to their poor record straddled with their emissions equipment. I wont own it and will patch my junk together diesel and gas due to the string of less reliable overpriced diesel engines on the market.