by
Marshall Brain

Inside This Article
1.
Introduction to How Diesel Two-Stroke Engines Work
2.
Understanding the Cycle
3.
General Motors EMD Engines
4.
Lots More Information
5.
See all Under the Hood articles

Understanding the Cycle
If you read
How Two-stroke Engines Work,
you learned that one big difference between two-stroke and
four-stroke engines
is the amount of power the engine can produce. The spark plug fires twice as 
often in a two-stroke engine -- once per every revolution of the crankshaft,
versus once for every two revolutions in a four-stroke engine. This means that 
a two-stroke engine has the potential to produce twice as much power as
a four-stroke engine of the same size.

The two-stroke engine article also explains that the
gasoline engine cycle,
where gas and air are mixed and compressed together, is not really a perfect 
match for the two-stroke approach. The problem is that some unburned fuel leaks
out each time the cylinder is recharged with the air-fuel mixture. (See
How Two-stroke Engines Work
for details.)

It turns out that the diesel approach, which compresses only air and then 
injects the fuel directly into the compressed air, is a much better match with
the two-stroke cycle. Many manufacturers of large
diesel engines
therefore use this approach to create high-power engines.

The figure below shows the layout of a typical two-stroke diesel engine:

At the top of the cylinder are typically two or four exhaust valves that all 
open at the same time. There is also the diesel fuel injector (shown above
in yellow). The piston is elongated, as in a gasoline two-stroke engine, so 
that it can act as the intake valve. At the bottom of the piston's travel,
the piston uncovers the ports for air intake. The intake air is pressurized by a
turbocharger
or a
supercharger
(light blue). The crankcase is sealed and contains oil as in a four-stroke 
engine.

The two-stroke diesel cycle goes like this:
List of 6 items
. When the piston is at the top of its travel, the cylinder contains a charge 
of highly compressed air. Diesel fuel is sprayed into the cylinder by the
injector and immediately ignites because of the heat and pressure inside the 
cylinder. This is the same process described in
How Diesel Engines Work.

. The pressure created by the combustion of the fuel drives the piston 
downward. This is the power stroke.

. As the piston nears the bottom of its stroke, all of the exhaust valves open. 
Exhaust gases rush out of the cylinder, relieving the pressure.

. As the piston bottoms out, it uncovers the air intake ports. Pressurized air 
fills the cylinder, forcing out the remainder of the exhaust gases.

. The exhaust valves close and the piston starts traveling back upward, 
re-covering the intake ports and compressing the fresh charge of air. This is 
the
compression stroke.

. As the piston nears the top of the cylinder, the cycle repeats with step 1.
list end
>From this description, you can see the big difference between a diesel 
>two-stroke engine and a gasoline two-stroke engine: In the diesel version, 
>only air
fills the cylinder, rather than gas and air mixed together. This means that a 
diesel two-stroke engine suffers from none of the environmental problems
that plague a gasoline two-stroke engine. On the other hand, a diesel 
two-stroke engine must have a
turbocharger
or a
supercharger,
and this means that you will never find a diesel two-stroke on a
chain saw --
it would simply be too expensive.

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General Motors EMD Engines
The General Motors EMD engine line is typical of the two-stroke diesel breed. 
These engines were introduced in the 1930s and power a large number of the
diesel locomotives
found in the United States. There have been three successive series in the EMD 
line: the 567 series, the 645 series, and the 710 series. The numbers refer
to the number of cubic inches per cylinder, with a typical engine having 16 
cylinders (for a total displacement on the order of 10,000 cubic inches!).
When you consider that a 5-liter (305-cubic-inch) engine is considered to be 
very large in an automobile, you can see that one of these EMD engines is
massive!

Here are some of the specifications for the EMD 645E3 engine:
List of 9 items (contains 1 nested list)
. Cylinder diameter - 9-1/16 inches
. Piston stroke - 10 inches
. Displacement per cylinder - 654 cubic inches
. Number of cylinders - 16 or 20
. Compression ratio - 14.5:1
. Exhaust valves per cylinder - 4
. Engine weight -
List of 2 items nesting level 1
. 16 cylinders: 34,526 pounds / 15,661 kg
. 20 cylinders: 40,144 pounds / 18,209 kg (The oil pan alone weighs over a ton!)
list end nesting level 1
. Idle speed - 315 rotations per minute (rpm)
. Full speed - 900 rpm
list end
A typical
horsepower rating
for one of these engines is 4,300 hp!

For more information on the diesel two-stroke and other engines, check out the 
links on the next page!



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