Diesel Engine Compressions
Diesel Engine Compressions
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Discussion

Joe T

Original Poster:

487 posts

241 months

Tuesday 12th December 2006
quotequote all
What sort of Compression readings would you expect to see on a Modern Turbo Diesel engine, common rail or normal, 20 Bar? 30 Bar?
Do Turbo diesels run a lower compression ratio than the normally aspirated version of the same engine. Hence lower Compression readings? Like in petrol engines?
I am interested in actual readings people have taken, not necessarily what the manual states.

Thanks

GavinPearson

5,715 posts

268 months

Tuesday 12th December 2006
quotequote all
Common rail injection systems run at around 25,000 psi, and the cylinder CR is around 18.5:1.

knightly

81 posts

232 months

Tuesday 12th December 2006
quotequote all
as for compression readings - typically around 150 Bar peak cylinder pressure.....but these figures are now creeping towards 200Bar for the latest Turbo-diesels......aluminium pistons cannot handle the loads so they are now using steel pistons.

As for compression ratio - yes I would agree with the 18.5:1 figure.....but anywhere between 15 to 20:1 .....the compression ratio is a function of the speed the engine is revving to, and the required cylinder pressure.......the general trend is that the higher the engine revs, and the more cylinder pressure - the lower the compression ratio is........so as a guide......high power diesels have a lower compression ratio......low power diesels have a high compression ratio.

as for the normally aspirated/turbo question.....I honestly cant remember......but its not just about compression - its more about in-cylinder swirl in order to mix the fuel and air - otherwise the fuel will not burn and it will just create black smoke.......a normally aspirated diesel engine will typically have a high amount of swirl designed into the intake port, otherwise known as a helical/snail port, typically 3 to 4 DCS.....a turbo engine will be slightly less.....and a high power turbo diesel will be quite low swirl, about 0.7-1.3 DCS

let me know if you want to know more - hope that all helps!

Edited by knightly on Tuesday 12th December 11:50

Joe T

Original Poster:

487 posts

241 months

Tuesday 12th December 2006
quotequote all
Thanks for this what I am actually interested in is real readings from cranking an engine with a compression gauge attached to individual cylinders.
I appreciate theoretical pressures have changed but interested to see if this is replicated in mechanical terms to tradtional testing methods.