Used to be years ago you could get a 'multi-fuel' tractor to run on carbureted diesel fuel. Old timey generators were sometimes like this as well. Typical compression ratios were about 6.0:1 (or lower). You would start the engine on gasoline, and when things got warm enough, you turned the valve on the tanks and you'd be burning diesel.
Fast forward to modern times.... What would happen if you took a modern motor like a Ford 300, built it to 6:1 compression, and burned carbureted diesel fuel? Anybody have any idea whether or not decent power could be made? By 'decent' I mean 100HP or so...
Now let's take this mental exercise a step further... What if we took this same motor and hung a turbo charger on it? Would we experience the same kind of power and economy gains we are used to seeing in 'normal' turbo diesels? Or are we just raising the effective compression ratio and opening ourselves up to detonation problems? Or would we even care about detonation? I'm wondering if diesel detonation at low compression ratios would even be as destructive as gasoline detonation...
Fast forward to modern times.... What would happen if you took a modern motor like a Ford 300, built it to 6:1 compression, and burned carbureted diesel fuel? Anybody have any idea whether or not decent power could be made? By 'decent' I mean 100HP or so...
Now let's take this mental exercise a step further... What if we took this same motor and hung a turbo charger on it? Would we experience the same kind of power and economy gains we are used to seeing in 'normal' turbo diesels? Or are we just raising the effective compression ratio and opening ourselves up to detonation problems? Or would we even care about detonation? I'm wondering if diesel detonation at low compression ratios would even be as destructive as gasoline detonation...