โApr-06-2020 08:44 PM
โApr-10-2020 04:53 AM
โApr-09-2020 11:10 PM
E&J push'n wind wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:jaycocamprs wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:BenK wrote:
Gasoline has fewer BTU's per unit measure than diesel, so diesel will most always produce more power per gallon
Nope. Not the way it works Ben. Nitomethane is the most commonly used powerful motor fuel ever. Look up how many BTU's it has.
Yea but the nitro cars are burning close to 5 gallons of it, in a 1000 feet
Nope. Try 13 to 15 gallons/ run.
And that's my point. It has so little BTU's/gallon it take a lot of fuel to make a run.
Wow, everybody bit on that one! The subject was about gasoline and diesel right? Not methane, butane, propane, nitromethane, JP5, solid oxide (since we went down that road) or any other fuel. Nitromethane is just a bit off topic and not germane to the subject. It wasn't hard to understand what BenK stated, "Gasoline has fewer BTU's per unit measure than diesel (any dispute?), so diesel will most always produce more power per gallon." It can be added (than gasoline) for anyone that may have missed it or didn't understand that point. Forgive me if this comes across as "mean spirited" but this definitely took a left turn down the rabbit hole.
โApr-09-2020 10:26 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:jaycocamprs wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:BenK wrote:
Gasoline has fewer BTU's per unit measure than diesel, so diesel will most always produce more power per gallon
Nope. Not the way it works Ben. Nitomethane is the most commonly used powerful motor fuel ever. Look up how many BTU's it has.
Yea but the nitro cars are burning close to 5 gallons of it, in a 1000 feet
Nope. Try 13 to 15 gallons/ run.
And that's my point. It has so little BTU's/gallon it take a lot of fuel to make a run.
โApr-09-2020 07:33 AM
ShinerBock wrote:
Yep, must be a magic unicorn. Everyone one else including the engine manufacturers, must be wrong when they say that adding a turbo to a diesel increases it's efficiency 20% along with added power and a significant reduction in black smoke.
โApr-09-2020 06:57 AM
โApr-09-2020 05:27 AM
ShinerBock wrote:
No it does not. Black smoke from a diesel is uburnt fuel(i.e. not enough air for the amount of fuel being added).
How to reduce black smoke in diesel engines
Older N/A diesels used to blow black smoke all the time because they did not have enough air to burn the amount of fuel being added. That changed with the introduction of turbochargers and they mainly only blow black smoke when the turbo is not spooled up or there is a fuel issue.
A leaner air fuel ratio with the same amount of fuel will create more power therefore less fuel is needed to create the same amount of power meaning it needs less fuel to do the same amount of work.
โApr-08-2020 04:49 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:jaycocamprs wrote:
Yea but the nitro cars are burning close to 5 gallons of it, in a 1000 feet
Nope. Try 13 to 15 gallons/ run.
And that's my point. It has so little BTU's/gallon it take a lot of fuel to make a run.
โApr-08-2020 08:09 AM
valhalla360 wrote:ShinerBock wrote:
Nope. You still seem to be confusing gas with diesels. What do you think the black smoke coming from diesels is? Un-burned fuel. Why? Because it does not have enough air to burn said fuel. This is why old N/A diesel blew puffs of black smoke just about all the time and turbo diesels blew a puff off the line until the turbo was pushing enough air to burn all the fuel being added which only took a second. Adding more air does improve efficiency in a diesel because it is able to use the fuel to more efficiently use the same amount of fuel to make more power instead of blowing it out as black smoke..
And I still don't believe your story. Not only, that, but none of the guys in this(LINK) 7.3L forum even say that 16 mpg is normal and if you look at fuelly.com here(LINK) it is even less than that.
Black smoke means you are pushing the engine outside of it's limits. For a couple seconds under hard acceleration, it's not harmful but if it's continuous as you are cruising down a level freeway, you are overloaded and that will kill efficiency in any engine type. Only difference with gas engines is the unburnt fuel isn't visible under similar conditions.
Believe what you like, it was pretty consistent over a long period of time.
โApr-08-2020 08:02 AM
ShinerBock wrote:
Nope. You still seem to be confusing gas with diesels. What do you think the black smoke coming from diesels is? Un-burned fuel. Why? Because it does not have enough air to burn said fuel. This is why old N/A diesel blew puffs of black smoke just about all the time and turbo diesels blew a puff off the line until the turbo was pushing enough air to burn all the fuel being added which only took a second. Adding more air does improve efficiency in a diesel because it is able to use the fuel to more efficiently use the same amount of fuel to make more power instead of blowing it out as black smoke..
And I still don't believe your story. Not only, that, but none of the guys in this(LINK) 7.3L forum even say that 16 mpg is normal and if you look at fuelly.com here(LINK) it is even less than that.
โApr-08-2020 06:35 AM
valhalla360 wrote:ShinerBock wrote:
And you are confusing how a gas engine operates with a diesel. Two different things. Gas engines have to stay within a certain air/fuel ratio(roughly 14.7:1 +/-3 parts air) meaning the more air you add, the more fuel you must add. Turbos do slightly improve a gas engine's thermal efficiency
Diesels can operate at a much wider air/fuel ratio from as low as 14.5:1 all the way up to 80:1 or even 100:1 depending on the engine. An N/A diesel does not have the ability to run that lean because it cannot suck enough air for the fuel being added as with any engine that operating at low rpms. Adding a turbo allows the engine to increase the amount of air to the same parts fuel making more power with the same amount of fuel. Turbos also increase a diesels thermal efficiency even more than a gas engine.
All three half ton 3.0L diesels don't just produce the same power as an old N/A HD diesel it exceeds it by at least 50 or hp and over 100 lb-ft all while using less fuel. Hell, even my 2.0 liter turbo diesel in my car makes more power and torque than the old Ford 6.9L and 7.3L N/A diesels.
I am not believing you on your brother in law story. So you are telling me that you two filled up and followed each other for a whole tank and refilled up again just to record each others mileage? And that a 2008(with emissions) truck weigh's within a couple hundred pounds of an old N/A engine truck? I am more surprised that you were actually were able to keep up with him in an old N/A diesel. I remember driving my grandfather's 185hp/338lb-ft 7.3L IDI, and it could even get out of its own way let alone keep up with a 350+hp/600+lb-ft 2008 turbo-diesel.
Unless you are pushing the engine outside it's normal operating ranges...they both are burning all the fuel that goes in. Once all the fuel is burnt, adding more air does not improve the efficiency.
You still seem to be confusing HP production with efficiency.
...and, no problem running at around 70mph on the freeway with the old 7.3. We weren't drag racing. Michigan to Arizona...And he owned the old truck before I bought it off him and he said he got similar MPG, so it's not the driver.
โApr-08-2020 03:39 AM
ShinerBock wrote:
And you are confusing how a gas engine operates with a diesel. Two different things. Gas engines have to stay within a certain air/fuel ratio(roughly 14.7:1 +/-3 parts air) meaning the more air you add, the more fuel you must add. Turbos do slightly improve a gas engine's thermal efficiency
Diesels can operate at a much wider air/fuel ratio from as low as 14.5:1 all the way up to 80:1 or even 100:1 depending on the engine. An N/A diesel does not have the ability to run that lean because it cannot suck enough air for the fuel being added as with any engine that operating at low rpms. Adding a turbo allows the engine to increase the amount of air to the same parts fuel making more power with the same amount of fuel. Turbos also increase a diesels thermal efficiency even more than a gas engine.
All three half ton 3.0L diesels don't just produce the same power as an old N/A HD diesel it exceeds it by at least 50 or hp and over 100 lb-ft all while using less fuel. Hell, even my 2.0 liter turbo diesel in my car makes more power and torque than the old Ford 6.9L and 7.3L N/A diesels.
I am not believing you on your brother in law story. So you are telling me that you two filled up and followed each other for a whole tank and refilled up again just to record each others mileage? And that a 2008(with emissions) truck weigh's within a couple hundred pounds of an old N/A engine truck? I am more surprised that you were actually were able to keep up with him in an old N/A diesel. I remember driving my grandfather's 185hp/338lb-ft 7.3L IDI, and it could even get out of its own way let alone keep up with a 350+hp/600+lb-ft 2008 turbo-diesel.
โApr-07-2020 08:51 PM
ShinerBock wrote:FishOnOne wrote:4x4ord wrote:
When we bought our last car I didnt even care enough to look under the hood to see if it had an engine let alone ask about hp. With the truck I want enough power to pull my 5ver 60 mph up a 8% grade. I think the 2020 Ford is finally there.
The Power Stroke has a good balance of power and fuel economy.
That is only two of the three things I look for in a truck. The other is reliability which exceeds the other two in my opinion especially since i can easily add power later. Other people might sacrifice reliability for more power in stock form, but that is there business.
Although I look for sustained power, not short burst power. Short burst power figures that can only be achieved when the engine temps are cold mean nothing to me.
โApr-07-2020 08:34 PM
1320Fastback wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:ShinerBock wrote:
The top fuel dragsters he is talking about only go 1000 ft, not a quarter mile.
Never heard of such a thing. Since when?
Had to look it up as I did not know either but since July, 2008 after Scott Kalitta was killed.
โApr-07-2020 08:34 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
People always complain about this topic when their favorite brand is behind the competition. When their brand is ahead of the competition then all this power is great.
I am more than happy with my weak 385hp 865tq. That's saying a lot since I tow more combined weight here than anyone I have heard of @ 35k combined all over the West Coast.
Oh yea my pathetic 6 speed that runs between 165 and 172 on any grade at any temp. Oh yea they also put the same trans in many MD applications.
OH let's not forget I controlled my 33k combined load down several miles of 14% grade in 6th gear by just using cruise control.
I am now rethinking things, I wish I had "MORE" of everything. :R