Mar-08-2014 08:07 AM
Mar-09-2014 08:29 AM
Mar-09-2014 07:59 AM
hone eagle wrote:wolfe10 wrote:hone eagle wrote:
Nobody mentions that Cat 'gives' the power it thinks the chassis can cool,the better they think the cooling system is the higher they will set the power.
Check out marine installations ,much much higher power and boats are always going uphill.
Common across the industry. Same goes for Cummins. In marine applications where cooling capacity is infinite and engine load is much more constant, AND emission standards are lower, indeed power is higher than in on-highway applications.
OK the OP asked if the power can be changed ?He was comparing his installation to another different builder ,its possible his at the limit for his chassis and the other has a higher capacity cooling system?
apples and oranges but still fruit ?
Mar-09-2014 07:07 AM
wolfe10 wrote:hone eagle wrote:
Nobody mentions that Cat 'gives' the power it thinks the chassis can cool,the better they think the cooling system is the higher they will set the power.
Check out marine installations ,much much higher power and boats are always going uphill.
Common across the industry. Same goes for Cummins. In marine applications where cooling capacity is infinite and engine load is much more constant, AND emission standards are lower, indeed power is higher than in on-highway applications.
Mar-09-2014 05:29 AM
wny_pat wrote:
And it really gets complicated when one manufacturer measurers torque/horsepower at the flywheel and another measures it at the wheels.
Mar-09-2014 05:25 AM
hone eagle wrote:
Nobody mentions that Cat 'gives' the power it thinks the chassis can cool,the better they think the cooling system is the higher they will set the power.
Check out marine installations ,much much higher power and boats are always going uphill.
Mar-09-2014 05:18 AM
Mar-09-2014 04:50 AM
Mar-08-2014 08:10 PM
Mar-08-2014 06:34 PM
Mar-08-2014 02:37 PM
Oldme wrote:
Another analogy I like:
HP= how fast you can hit a wall
Torque- how far you can push that wall.
Mar-08-2014 01:12 PM
Mar-08-2014 11:13 AM
bobman wrote:
The combustion temperature is determined largely by the correct mixture ratio of fuel to air if the boost goes up ( meaning more air is being packed into the cylinder ) then the computer must compensate by lengthening the time the injectors are open to inject more fuel and keep the proper mixture
If that didn't happen the engine would run lean and if lean long enough the exhaust temp will exceed the rating the valves are designed for
Mar-08-2014 10:46 AM
Mar-08-2014 10:44 AM