rScotty
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2001
- Messages
- 9,699
- Location
- Rural mountains - Colorado
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, JD530, JD310SG. Restoring Yanmar YM165D
Experiments are always a good idea. But squirting liquid diesel into an air flow isn't quite the right experiment because raw diesel fuel just doesn't make much in the way of combustible fumes at room temperature. That's why diesel is a "safe" fuel and keeps well when stored.I want you to conduct an experiment.
Go to your diesel engine and remove the air filter. Spray some diesel in using a water bottle. Does the engine automatically increase in RPM.
Report back.
For your experiment, we need to be mixing intake air with a combustible fume....that is, we need to be mixing a gas with a gas, not a gas with a liquid. We need something to burn that is already in the gaseous state.
I suggest we either fill the spray bottle with boiling diesel, or with some kind of fuel that makes lots of fumes at room temperture. A gasoline soaked rag or a can of spray ether are both good sources of room temperature fumes to mix into the intake air.
I've used both of those to increase a diesel from cranking rpm to running rpm. I'm guessing most of us with older diesels have done the same.
Good experiment, thanks.
rScotty