โOct-02-2013 01:53 PM
โOct-09-2013 02:30 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:Glowing exhaust manifolds doesn't prove anything. Load a lean gasoline engine pulling Grapevine on a 100 degree day and you'll experience similar results. Sorry... but the ONLY meaningful EGT readings are with calibrated K-probes mounted at the exhaust ports. LPG Stoichiometric is 15.5, on gasoline it's closer to 14.7. Ignition timing is critical, meaning that the static, dynamic and total advance curves are completely different between the fuels. Get it wrong and you risk losing an engine... with ANY fuel.
Wanna know HOW HOT things get? With a dead stock engine, towing the cast iron exhaust manifolds glowed BRIGHT RED; enough to burn rubber a foot and a half distant.
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:Nonsense.
LPG powered engines leak lube oil a lot more than gasoline powered engine. Work around them enough and you also learn this point.
โOct-08-2013 10:45 AM
So wrote:robert@honda wrote:With all due respect, propane actually runs cooler than gasoline when properly set up and adjusted. Why?... because it contains lower BTU's. The reason valves burn on dry fuels is because of the lack of lubrication & cushioning on the valve's face & seat. The constant metal-to-metal contact of the valve face & seat, disrupts the seal and eventually causes exhaust leakage. The continued exhaust leakage eventually burns the valve, not because of direct overheating. This isn't an issue when Stellite valves & seats are used.
In addition to starting/choke issues, propane and natural gas burn hotter than gasoline. This can cause the exhaust valve and exhaust value guide to overheat and possibly fail sooner.
-kenny-
โOct-08-2013 10:17 AM
โOct-08-2013 05:46 AM
So wrote:
The reason valves burn on dry fuels is because of the lack of lubrication & cushioning on the valve's face & seat. The constant metal-to-metal contact of the valve face & seat, disrupts the seal and eventually causes exhaust leakage. The continued exhaust leakage eventually burns the valve, not because of direct overheating. This isn't an issue when Stellite valves & seats are used.
-kenny-
โOct-07-2013 12:41 PM
robert@honda wrote:With all due respect, propane actually runs cooler than gasoline when properly set up and adjusted. Why?... because it contains lower BTU's. The reason valves burn on dry fuels is because of the lack of lubrication & cushioning on the valve's face & seat. The constant metal-to-metal contact of the valve face & seat, disrupts the seal and eventually causes exhaust leakage. The continued exhaust leakage eventually burns the valve, not because of direct overheating. This isn't an issue when Stellite valves & seats are used.
In addition to starting/choke issues, propane and natural gas burn hotter than gasoline. This can cause the exhaust valve and exhaust value guide to overheat and possibly fail sooner.
โOct-07-2013 11:15 AM
โOct-03-2013 10:03 AM
robert@honda wrote:
...
Caveat: In the USA, converting a portable gasoline generator to run on propane or natural gas, etc. without having it re-certified by the EPA violates the Clean Air Act. ...
-Robert@Honda
Caveat: I work for Honda, but the preceding is my opinion alone.
โOct-03-2013 08:01 AM
โOct-02-2013 04:32 PM
smkettner wrote:
What is the expected use? Any specific concerns?
โOct-02-2013 03:28 PM
โOct-02-2013 03:14 PM
โOct-02-2013 03:10 PM
โOct-02-2013 02:15 PM
โOct-02-2013 02:13 PM