Diesel vs pump gas and boost
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On top of that they use a fuel that burns much slower than gasoline and doesn't have the tendency to auto-ignite.
There is more to it than this, but this is the short version. This is also very similar to how direct injection works and is the reason fuel mileage can be increased in vehicles utilizing it along with added horsepower. Compression ratios and boost levels can be increased without the tendency to detonate or pre-ignite.
Now I'm not a diesel or direct injection expert, so I may have some things backwards, but I'm pretty sure what I've posted is correct.
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Last edited by 6.0mustang; Nov 18, 2012 at 08:04 PM.
Last edited by 6.0mustang; Nov 18, 2012 at 08:06 PM.
The duramax, Scorpion 6.7 (ford) and 6.7 cummins, the compression ranges from 16.8-17.3. Ive never read of any diesel over 20:1 compression.
They are direct injection, with pilot injection, to calm down the diesel clatter and make them quieter. Fuel rail pressures vary from 10k-29k. Yes, 29,000 psi of fuel pressure

Sled pullers and race diesels actually LOWER the compression, but it makes them harder to start in cold scenarios.
As for boost, my stock 6.7 cummins made 30, with a smarty it made 34. My duramax only makes 20-22 stock. The programmer is in the box
Most twin turbo setups make 50-80, rarely do street driven trucks make more than 80-90 psi. Most single turbo stuff is in the 50-70 range. The 6.7 cummins stuff, most guys are in the 50s. Drive pressure is very important in the diesel world. Its what makes those things so efficient. pressure ratios are rarely more than 2:1.they only turn 3000-3500 in most stock apps, and race engines turn 4000-5000 rpm tops. Diesel fuel begins to lose a LOT of efficiency in the burn process over 5000 rpm because it takes so long to burn, hence why most diesels are in tow vehicles, but thats changing quickly because they are getting extremely efficient in small displacement applications. Its just hard to fight the notion that they are smelly and smokey.
You can run a diesel at most any airfuel, up to 50:1 AFR. Most are tuned off smoke and EGT. Make more power? Give it more fuel. EGTs get too high, add nitrous or a bigger turbo, then change where the fuel comes in

the only way to really hurt one is to over fuel it ( Too much fuel, not enough air, EGTs skyrocket.)
Diesels are cool. Its a small undergound world of gearheads. totally different animal.
As far as multiple turbos, yes. Its called compounding. The primary is fed by the secondary. Primary is the small one, secondary is the large one.
Ive owned several diesels over the last 10 years, and only recently started modding them the last 2 years

Louis






