Daronspicher
Member
I was reading this thread and noticed a post or two where the owner was under the impression that the glow plugs warm up the cylinder.
That's not how I thought glow plugs worked so I thought I would ask around about it.
I was under the impression, diesel cold start is a matter of the compressed fuel/air mix not combusting at the top of stroke because it's too cold and doesn't ignite.
When you run the glow plugs, you heat up a little bitty (think nail head) at the top of the cylinder, hot enough it glows red (glow plug).
Then, when the compression stroke happens, the mix is compressed against that hot thing at the top and combusts. The first hot actual combustion leads to the next one being successful and the engine is started.
Is that how it works, or are we really "heating the cylinders"? I would think actual heat in the cylinder to be minimal.
That would make the idea of bumping the starter to reposition the crank not that effectual.
Anyone know how it really goes? I'm open to learning something.
Thanks.
That's not how I thought glow plugs worked so I thought I would ask around about it.
I was under the impression, diesel cold start is a matter of the compressed fuel/air mix not combusting at the top of stroke because it's too cold and doesn't ignite.
When you run the glow plugs, you heat up a little bitty (think nail head) at the top of the cylinder, hot enough it glows red (glow plug).
Then, when the compression stroke happens, the mix is compressed against that hot thing at the top and combusts. The first hot actual combustion leads to the next one being successful and the engine is started.
Is that how it works, or are we really "heating the cylinders"? I would think actual heat in the cylinder to be minimal.
That would make the idea of bumping the starter to reposition the crank not that effectual.
Anyone know how it really goes? I'm open to learning something.
Thanks.