Diesel Rotary?
Diesel Rotary?
So I have a question...From what little I know of rotary engines and diesel engines I am wondering why they haven't made a rotary diesel.
1. diesel engines operate at higher temperatures to try ro burn the excess fuel...rotary engines already operate at a high temp.
2. rotary engines require lubrication in the combustion chamber...diesel fuel has more "oil" in it than gasoline...solves a problem right?
Also diesel engines have a lot of torque and low horsepower and the rotary is the opposite....
I am admittedly not an engineer I am just curious...
1. diesel engines operate at higher temperatures to try ro burn the excess fuel...rotary engines already operate at a high temp.
2. rotary engines require lubrication in the combustion chamber...diesel fuel has more "oil" in it than gasoline...solves a problem right?
Also diesel engines have a lot of torque and low horsepower and the rotary is the opposite....
I am admittedly not an engineer I am just curious...
there are diesel rotaries. It's just that generally diesel's are for commerical applications and noone wanted to really develop a whole new engine and all around it. Licensing fees for rotary tech back in the 70's we pretty outrageous too.
Diesel burns slowly, that is why there is so much low down torque. If you tried winding out a diesel engine to 9,000 rpms... LoL It would be pretty funny.
Seriously though, it would be a purely low rpm machine, and it's piston counterparts would be better suited I think.
Seriously though, it would be a purely low rpm machine, and it's piston counterparts would be better suited I think.
Originally Posted by kantonm
1. diesel engines operate at higher temperatures to try ro burn the excess fuel...rotary engines already operate at a high temp.
2. rotary engines require lubrication in the combustion chamber...diesel fuel has more "oil" in it than gasoline...solves a problem right?
Also diesel engines have a lot of torque and low horsepower and the rotary is the opposite....
2. rotary engines require lubrication in the combustion chamber...diesel fuel has more "oil" in it than gasoline...solves a problem right?
Also diesel engines have a lot of torque and low horsepower and the rotary is the opposite....
Rolls Royce and Yanmar Diesel worked on Wankel-Diesel engines:
http://www.der-wankelmotor.de/Motore...lls-royce.html
http://www.der-wankelmotor.de/Motore...lls-royce.html
Hy,
I've been reading on this forum a while now... and here it is. The first post...
As you could see on this website, the total horsepower reached in a dieselwankel is 350 bhp!? And this is without any new dieseltechnology like 3th generation common rail. It's kind of a big engine though and it's the first time I see that the two combustion chambers (or how do you call 'em in rotaries) are different in size. The first is quite big: 3250 cc. Seems like a lot for a rotary.
Imagine the possibilities: nowadays diesle engines reach 160 bhp for a 2.0 liter... Probably there a good reason why they aren't developing this further. Perhaps because of the design of a rotary the high compression rate is hard to reach?
I've been reading on this forum a while now... and here it is. The first post...
As you could see on this website, the total horsepower reached in a dieselwankel is 350 bhp!? And this is without any new dieseltechnology like 3th generation common rail. It's kind of a big engine though and it's the first time I see that the two combustion chambers (or how do you call 'em in rotaries) are different in size. The first is quite big: 3250 cc. Seems like a lot for a rotary.
Imagine the possibilities: nowadays diesle engines reach 160 bhp for a 2.0 liter... Probably there a good reason why they aren't developing this further. Perhaps because of the design of a rotary the high compression rate is hard to reach?
im reading the page translated. am i understandign this correctly? it say stage one chambe rvolume 3250 and stage 2 chamber volume 1265. in the chart at the bottom it says 2 x (3250 +1265)
that suggests to me that they may be using first stage as a compressor then handing it off to the smaller stage for final compression / combustion.
is that right?
that suggests to me that they may be using first stage as a compressor then handing it off to the smaller stage for final compression / combustion.
is that right?
Wonder how much torque those were putting out. Can you imagine a 6.4 liter Rotary with 700hp in a Ford Superduty! Wonder why Mazda never expanded those ideas? It is all useless now, the way California is going, all diesels will be outlawed next year anyway.
the L shaped seal that allows the gas to get behind and seal it tighter is ingenious. the whole thing is just brilliant
I'm gonna resurect this thread.. I've been considering tinkering with a diesel rotary and this picture piqued my interest.. is this a 13b rotary I spy?
http://www.smartplugs.com/images/engines/rotary3.jpg

I've been debating running a gas-diesel mix first. maybe 5-10% to start and going higher.
http://www.smartplugs.com/images/engines/rotary3.jpg

I've been debating running a gas-diesel mix first. maybe 5-10% to start and going higher.



