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run faster wrote:I was going to say something but that was settled pretty quickly
raptor wrote:Gas turbines can run on a wide variety of fuels.
ace of shades wrote:Tomorrow if I get the chance I will ask a friend of mine how the motor on his grader works. It runs off of diesel but starts off of gas. Its not a pony motor either, it actually has gas going into a piston when it starts and some how swaps over to diesel. I'm not certain on how it works, but when I find out I will update and edit this post
LBB wrote:raptor wrote:Gas turbines can run on a wide variety of fuels.
But they gas mileage sucks.
That's why most tanks have diesel engines and not gas turbines.
JamesCannon wrote:The bad thing about
sleeping with biggin is not
AIDS, it's e.coli


Biggin wrote:LBB wrote:raptor wrote:Gas turbines can run on a wide variety of fuels.
But they gas mileage sucks.
That's why most tanks have diesel engines and not gas turbines.
But the best tank in the world uses a gas turbine engine.
LBB wrote:The Leo 2 has a range of 340 miles with it's internal fuel, while the M1A1 has a range of 265 miles, and this while the M1A1 carries 700 liters more fuel.

The best tank is not the best zombie-apocalypse survival vehicle. The best tank in the world has to carry a very big gun and very heavy ammunition to defeat other very big tanks with armor that's almost as big and heavy as the armor on the best tank in the world. The best tank in the world has several concerns that rank much higher than fuel efficiency, and the best tank in the world is backed up by the best supply chain in the world. You, as a survivor of a natural disaster or zombie apocalypse, will not have such a supply chain, and will likely not need to defeat such armor, or defend yourself against 120mm depleted-uranium shells.Biggin wrote:LBB wrote:raptor wrote:Gas turbines can run on a wide variety of fuels.
But they gas mileage sucks.
That's why most tanks have diesel engines and not gas turbines.
But the best tank in the world uses a gas turbine engine.


ding ding ding...different types of combustion principles and how they ustilize the fuelsCiggsWar wrote:The compression of of a vechile is around 9 :1 for gasoline and around 20:1 for diesel, it takes that much heat to burn diesel fuels, the other difference is the carbon chain- C7H16 through C11H24 for gas and while diesel fuel is typically C14H30. The cracked carbon chains of gas to get hydrocarbon chains of different lengths from a low to a high to get octane mixes. It takes less refining to process diesel fuel.
heptane handles compression very poorly. Compress it just a little and it ignites spontaneously. Octane handles compression very well -- you can compress it a lot and nothing happens. Eighty-seven-octane gasoline is gasoline that contains 87-percent octane and 13-percent heptane (or some other combination of fuels that has the same performance of the 87/13 combination of octane/heptane). It spontaneously ignites at a given compression level, and can only be used in engines that do not exceed that compression ratio. If you to put that in a diesel it would knock and over heat the dentonation occurs too rapid exploding.
gas ignites fast 125,000 BTU, diesel burns at 147,000 BTU making the diesel more efficient at burning more of the fuel mix.
Gas engines are wasteful compared to diesels.
There has been innovation that were scraped back in the latter 60's GM came out with a sand block engine that could handle the heptane as in heat and had efficiency and ever long lasting, never happened and became a myth. There are thousands of innovations that are scraped bought out.
You will never see a better way of life in our current ignorances.
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