That.
Is.
AWESOME!!!
4cylndrfury wrote: Wärtsilä-Sulzer RTA96-C:
I just want to know when I can move in? There is probably room for a family 4 in there
How about twin enduro kart motors? 140 mph, an inch off the ground -- pretty intense. Can you think of any interesting modifications one could put on a karting motor to get an extra edge ? I'm working on a karting multi-media project (www.getcarly.com) and would love to get the latest and greatest concepts/modifications for karts.
Jay wrote:4cylndrfury wrote: Wärtsilä-Sulzer RTA96-C:How can this happen???a two-stroke turbocharged low-speed diesel engine designed by the Finnish manufacturer Wärtsilä. It is currently considered the largest reciprocating engine in the world, designed for large container ships, running on heavy fuel oil. It stands at (13.5 metres (44 ft)) high, is 27.3 m (90 ft) long, and weighs over 2300 tonnes in its largest 14-cylinder version — producing 109,000 brake horsepower (80,08 MW).(Yeha22 already beat me to the SJ...)
With such a smooth bend in the connecting rod, I 'd say it had some kind of hydraulic lock from coolant breach or stuck open fuel injector. Seen this before on large marine diesels--not this large, but, I'd bet money on hydraulic lock
triumph5 wrote: With such a smooth bend in the connecting rod, I 'd say it had some kind of hydraulic lock from coolant breach or stuck open fuel injector. Seen this before on large marine diesels--not this large, but, I'd bet money on hydraulic lock
Yeah, that was my initial idea, but geez! Look at the thickness of the metal that had to bend to make that shape. I would have thought it would fracture or warp in some way that looks a bit nastier than what you see here. If I didn't know better I'd almost say that looks like it was deliberately made like that as a sculpture.
I'm still trying to wrap my head around the kind of crazy motion and pressures that had to go on within the cylinder for that to happen... I'm guessing these engines don't exactly run very hot either.
The fact that it didn't fracture leads me to believe it was twisted "relatively" slowly, and hydraulic lock will do that. Usually done on or right after start up, so you don't have the violent-metal-shattering damage you see when it happens to a engine at full chat. I pulled a rod out of a Detroit Diesel that looked as artfully curved, but not broken. And it was from hydraulic lock (wet exhaust backed up into the cylinder through an open exhaust valve) I'd like to see if the cylinder head cracked, or, blew. I suspect this engine has dual or individual cylinder heads just in case something like this happens.
That connecting rod would make a great lawn ornament!
you also have to remember the extreme slow speeds of those huge diesels.. most of them probably redline around 600rpm
triumph5 wrote: That connecting rod would make a great lawn ornament!
I think my neighbors would be pretty pissed about this.
Also I would not want to see the shipping bill.
GetCarly wrote: How about twin enduro kart motors? 140 mph, an inch off the ground -- pretty intense. Can you think of any interesting modifications one could put on a karting motor to get an extra edge ? I'm working on a karting multi-media project (www.getcarly.com) and would love to get the latest and greatest concepts/modifications for karts.
I can feel my elbows burning.... 140 MPH without a cage. Wow.
imirk wrote:triumph5 wrote: That connecting rod would make a great lawn ornament!I think my neighbors would be pretty pissed about this. Also I would not want to see the shipping bill.
My neighbors would just shrug. They are used to my shenanigans.
I think you have to forfeit the use of the name "Locost" when you start talking about bolting in a vintage offenhauser engine.
Here are some pretty things
What I find most amazing about a turbo 4 offy is the cylinder head is cast into the block. No seperate head. I remember walking through a warehouse about 4 years after they fell out of favor at Indy, and there were dozens and dozens of blocks, cranks, complete engines sitting on the shelves collecting dust. I've often wondered what happened to them
cwh wrote: Old Offy= Art. What were the specs on those?
A 251.92 cubic inch (4,128.29 cm³) twin-cam four-cylinder racing Offy with a 15:1 compression ratio and a 4.28125 x 4.375-inch (111.1 mm) bore and stroke, could produce 420 horsepower (313 kW) at 6,600 rpm; 1.77 horsepower (1.32 kW) per cubic inch (81 kW/L). Other variants of the engine produced up to 3 horsepower (2.2 kW) per cubic inch (137 kW/L).
Before turbo boost limits, over 1,000 bhp (750 kW) could be attained using around 120 in Hg (44.3 psi) pressure. The final 2.65 litre 4 cyl Offy, restricted to 80 in Hg (24.6 psi) turbo pressure, gave 770 bhp (570 kW) at 9,000 rpm.
I'm surprised it took 6 pages to get a picture of an Offenhauser in this thread, they are truly gorgeous engines, and it is absolutely incredible what they could accomplish with what was effectively an evolution of a nineteen-teens design. 1K horsepower at nearly 50 pounds of boost on a basic architecture that appeared before WWI? that's a strong design
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