On Fri, 27 Oct 2006 06:39:42 -0400, Bill Putney <bptn RemoveThis @kinez.net>
wrote:
>Glenn - I'm thinking that the fuel mass in the engine compartment
>environment (in the lines and fuel rail) is a *lot* less than the volume
>in the tank - therefore, with a given number of calories absorbed by the
>lines and rail, it's <snip>
Possessive: "ITS"
Contractive form of the third person "to be": "IT'S"
GOTCHA!
>temperature rise without the full loop circulation
>will be a *lot* higher than the rise in the whole tank (from the heated
>fuel returning to the tank), plus heat dumped over that huge volume back
>at the tank will also be dissipated at a moderate enough rate into the
>ambient due to the large surface area if the tank acting as a radiator -
>the net result of the full loop circulation will be lower temperature at
>the point of injection into the plenum. <snip>
Putney's right here. I have an exact same, but much larger, model I
dealt with when retrofitting emergency diesel and gas turbine
generator fuel tanks back in the '90s.
Most original installations of these were much like the older FI
system....diesel or JP-4 would be pumped into a day tank, the engine
would take what it needed from there, and return excess fuel from the
pump or rail directly to the fuel tank through a separate return line.
Contractors, looking to make a extra bucks on loosely spec'd "design
and build" contracts, would replace the tank with a double wall
replacement (usually 5K gallons or more) and double wall piping, but
only a supply line would be provided, dumping the heated excess from
the engine of the generator set(s) into the day tank. The problem was
that the diesel would become dangerously hot after hours of operation,
the amount varying from model to model and by, of course, capacity.
In the projects of which I was in charge, I demanded that a double
walled return line be added to the spec to prevent this. A 10K tank
filled with #2 diesel, feeding a 750 KW generator set running at 80%
load (Cummins VT-38000/Marathon alternator), with a ground temperature
of 19°C, would heat up 4°C after 8 hours operation. However, one
"single line" installation, using the same load factor but on a 16V71T
Detroit Diesel, would heat the fuel in a 100 gallon day tank up to
almost 40°C in half the time period. Detroits run a common loop
rail/unit injector system on top of the heads, whereas the Cummins
used a PT pump with less exposure of the fuel in the cylinder head
area, so there was a little more heat transfer from the Detroit, but
the case for the dedicated return line was made, and the company's bid
specs were changed to include same.
(Note that I also wasn't stupid enough to use a Detroit Diesel for a
generator set engine! What a disaster, but the middle manager
"injuneers" at AT&T prevailed on that one. One on them was later
allowed to "retire" after rather large kickbacks involving the
supplier were uncovered and the IRS started investigating, and AT&T
got a little skittish having IRS investigators showing up back in New
Jersey.)
I would imagine the same sort of problems with hot fuel due to having
the regulator/return in the tank in a gasoline powered car would be
similar. The concern of heating of the volatiles in the fuel tank is
a non-starter, as well, since the evap system would take care of that
at start-up. I think the reason for this change was one that Frank
Zappa would full appreciate: "cheapness."
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