Some effects of injection advance angle, engine-jacket temperature, and speed on combustion in a compression-ignition engine (open access)

Some effects of injection advance angle, engine-jacket temperature, and speed on combustion in a compression-ignition engine

"An optical indicator and a high-speed motion-picture camera capable of operating at the rate of 2,000 frames per second were used to record simultaneously the pressure development and the flame formation in the combustion chamber of the NACA combustion apparatus. Tests were made at engine speeds of 570 and 1,500 r.p.m. The engine-jacket temperature was varied from 100 degrees to 300 degrees F. And the injection advance angle from 13 degrees after top center to 120 degrees before top center. The results show that the course of the combustion is largely controlled by the temperature and pressure of the air in the chamber from the time the fuel is injected until the time at which combustion starts and by the ignition lag" (p. 343).
Date: January 15, 1935
Creator: Rothrock, A. M. & Waldron, C. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen as an auxiliary fuel in compression-ignition engines (open access)

Hydrogen as an auxiliary fuel in compression-ignition engines

From Summary: "An investigation was made to determine whether a sufficient amount of hydrogen could be efficiently burned in a compression-ignition engine to compensate for the increase of lift of an airship due to the consumption of the fuel oil. The performance of a single-cylinder four-stroke-cycle compression-ignition engine operating on fuel oil alone was compared with its performance when various quantities of hydrogen were inducted with the inlet air. Engine-performance data, indicator cards, and exhaust-gas samples were obtained for each change in engine-operating conditions."
Date: April 15, 1935
Creator: Gerrish, Harold C. & Foster, Hampton H.
System: The UNT Digital Library