awlchu
Gold Member
....Something I read about diesel specific antifreeze, I'm having a hard time accepting this explanation of cavitation but obviously it happens, or does it?
from www.ford-trucks.com
------------------------cut here-------------------------
Excuse me if I seem a little dense today, alot going on but I have a question. How exactly could moving water a little faster through the water jackets reduce cavitation. If I am not mistaken, cavitation is caused by the imense compression of Diesel motors. This "banging" if you will is translated to the water causing air bubbles.
A definition that I found on the web pretty much explains what I thought to be the case.
The bubble tries to collapse on its self. This is called imploding, the opposite of exploding. The bubble is trying to collapse from all sides, but if the bubble is laying against a piece of metal such as the impeller or volute it cannot collapse from that side, so the fluid comes in from the opposite side at this high velocity proceeded by a shock wave that can cause all kinds of damage. There is a very characteristic round shape to the liquid as it bangs against the metal creating the impression that the metal was hit with a "ball peen hammer".
This damage would normally occur at right angles to the metal, but experience shows that the high velocity liquid seems to come at the metal from a variety of angles. This can be explained by the fact that dirt particles get stuck on the surface of the bubble and are held there by the surface tension of the fluid. Since the dirt particle has weakened the surface tension of the bubble it becomes the weakest part and the section where the collapse will probably take place.
This banging on your cylinder wall will eventually lead to failure so there is an anti-cavitation property to the antifreeze. I have seen cylinders that have failed from cavitation and it looks like someone beat a hole in the side of them with a hammer. I do not disagree that lowering the surface tention of water makes it wetter, in fact that was a question my science teacher asked in high school, (the answer was add soap) I just don't understand how moving it faster would help.
from www.ford-trucks.com
------------------------cut here-------------------------
Excuse me if I seem a little dense today, alot going on but I have a question. How exactly could moving water a little faster through the water jackets reduce cavitation. If I am not mistaken, cavitation is caused by the imense compression of Diesel motors. This "banging" if you will is translated to the water causing air bubbles.
A definition that I found on the web pretty much explains what I thought to be the case.
The bubble tries to collapse on its self. This is called imploding, the opposite of exploding. The bubble is trying to collapse from all sides, but if the bubble is laying against a piece of metal such as the impeller or volute it cannot collapse from that side, so the fluid comes in from the opposite side at this high velocity proceeded by a shock wave that can cause all kinds of damage. There is a very characteristic round shape to the liquid as it bangs against the metal creating the impression that the metal was hit with a "ball peen hammer".
This damage would normally occur at right angles to the metal, but experience shows that the high velocity liquid seems to come at the metal from a variety of angles. This can be explained by the fact that dirt particles get stuck on the surface of the bubble and are held there by the surface tension of the fluid. Since the dirt particle has weakened the surface tension of the bubble it becomes the weakest part and the section where the collapse will probably take place.
This banging on your cylinder wall will eventually lead to failure so there is an anti-cavitation property to the antifreeze. I have seen cylinders that have failed from cavitation and it looks like someone beat a hole in the side of them with a hammer. I do not disagree that lowering the surface tention of water makes it wetter, in fact that was a question my science teacher asked in high school, (the answer was add soap) I just don't understand how moving it faster would help.