Feb-09-2019 05:44 PM
Feb-12-2019 02:54 AM
danrclem wrote:
The link also said that the steel pistons could have tighter clearances and since the cylinder wall and piston expanded at about the same rate there would be less cylinder wear.
It sounds like Ford is going the extra mile to make these engines more durable but only time will tell for sure.
Feb-11-2019 06:16 PM
Feb-11-2019 06:08 PM
Feb-11-2019 05:43 PM
Feb-11-2019 03:36 PM
Groover wrote:wrgrs50s wrote:
Wow, I was questioning the post on the steel pistons so I looked it up and sure enough, it's something that performance diesels have been using in their racing engines for a while. I never would have thought a steel piston would work because of the inertia weight. Apparently they've beefed the rods up to compensate.
Steel weighs twice as much as aluminum for the same volume. The designers may have been able to reduce the volume due to steel having a higher strength at high temperatures than aluminum but even if they didn't you can reduce the inertia stress by half just by reducing RPM by 30%. Since most diesel engines only turn about half the RPM of gas engines it doesn't sound like piston inertia would be too big of a deal. Also, any connecting rod that can survive the compression stroke of one of these diesels shouldn't have any trouble with holding the piston back at the top of the stroke.
Feb-11-2019 09:40 AM
Feb-11-2019 06:17 AM
Feb-11-2019 05:22 AM
wrgrs50s wrote:
Wow, I was questioning the post on the steel pistons so I looked it up and sure enough, it's something that performance diesels have been using in their racing engines for a while. I never would have thought a steel piston would work because of the inertia weight. Apparently they've beefed the rods up to compensate.
Feb-10-2019 05:43 PM
All I could afford wrote:
Comming soon...a TV commercial featuring A load of bricks being dropped onto a steel piston, versus A load of bricks being dropped onto an aluminum piston.
Feb-10-2019 05:12 PM
Feb-10-2019 03:16 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
Here's a video from Mr Truck. He missed it, but the new Power Stroke will have Mahle Steel pistons. This should make this engine platform good for an easy 1 million miles.
Link
LOL, I never realized that aluminum pistons were holding the SD back from the million mile mark.
Wow, learn something every day! :B
Feb-10-2019 03:14 PM
ShinerBock wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
Most of your HD diesel engines now use steel pistons and is the major reason most can get 1 million miles without a rebuild.
There are many HD diesel engines that go a million miles and don't use steel pistons. The ability to go a million miles before an overhaul is generally not due to piston material. Worn sleeves and piston rings along with bent rods are generally causes of an overhaul in a million mile HD truck.
Also, one of the biggest factors in an HD truck making it to a million miles has a lot to do with how it is driven and of course maintained. An HD long haul truck that is on the road more often with minimal cold starts will easily get to a millions miles while the same truck used as a delivery truck with a lot of stop/starts will probably no get to a million miles before an overhaul.
Feb-10-2019 11:23 AM
FishOnOne wrote:
Most of your HD diesel engines now use steel pistons and is the major reason most can get 1 million miles without a rebuild.
Feb-10-2019 11:10 AM