Would putting in the 5t lighter pistons thus lowering rotating weight mass , give you the higher rpm, this would only work up to a certain rpm, after that the bolts would have the same stress as a lower rpm with the heavier pistons
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Tensile loads are better than shearing loads. For steel a good rule of thumb in shear strength is half of the tensile strength. In shear you never what the bolt to actually touch the sides of the hole or you will get fretting which will break the bolt in short order. In shear the clamp load has to be high enough that the friction forces between the parts keep them from moving.Maybe we need a new rod design, or copy an old one.... designed to take the stretching load off off the rod bolts and convert it to shearing force. Compliments of the Cummins crew...
I have nothing better to do while out to sea for half a year at a time
Some say i am over thinking this,
guys, i just want to fix a problem.
i dont want to go over 55,
have any reason not to devote some time to finding a solution. this is a discusion, humor me!
I don't think anyone needs to worry about rod/rod bolts getting weak due to age. Tightening a bolt is a stressful but not repetitive, hopefully, lol. No fatigue there. Since bolt is designed to fall short of its 'yield point' , even when running, it will remain stable. Flex under normal use is small too. Fatigue is never an issue. Most automotive rods can handle many billions of cycles (say 100+ years of constant use). Big rigs can run million + miles before rebuild and rods are re-used.All metal fatigues and changes with age.
I think you missed my point....Valve spring are very different. They have tension/compression stresses that bend the metal. That can cause fatigue. That creates heat and may increase creep. It is common for high mileage auto spring to get very weak (not so on springs that just sit).
Maybe for a deuce. I don't have much experience with springs. I remember when I first rebuilt my 70 GTO 400 (30y ago), those 130K mile springs all measured 50-80lbs seat pressure. The factory spec was 100 or 110. The lesson learned was always replace them. I don't even test old springs now, just toss them then use ~130lb Crane springs. New springs also benefit from 40years of metallurgic improvements.I think you missed my point.
It is rare to find one that has changed enough to matter.
-Chuck
It wants to be a Multifuel!Now to solve the problem why my Cummins NHC-250 only revs to 2100 rpm .![]()
Now to solve the problem why my Cummins NHC-250 only revs to 2100 rpm .![]()
The old Cummins will throw a rod also if you run it too fast.Now to solve the problem why my Cummins NHC-250 only revs to 2100 rpm .![]()
Yep!The old Cummins will throw a rod also if you run it too fast.
Short stroke gas engines will usually just float the valves if ran past redline. Almost all long stroke diesels will reward you with a thrown rod if you push her too hard. It's not just a problem with multifuels. As with anything, you push it too hard and parts are going to fly.
I'll bet if you checked the tach with a known rev indicator you'll find it's wrong. The spring looses it's strength over the years.Now to solve the problem why my Cummins NHC-250 only revs to 2100 rpm .![]()
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