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The throttle pedal is the only governor. Or when the engine comes apart...
What limits the engine RPM on an '08? On a downshift my engine RPM has pegged the tach past 4k. Kinda makes me worry...
Not true. Every diesel engine is governed. See step 20 on the PDF below if you doubt:
http://www.thedieselfiles.com/Ford/Stanadyne%20DB2%20Operation%20and%20Instruction%20Manual%2099009.pdf
I've banned members for PUI.Plus I'm on beer #3.
Well, thank you, Sir Issac Frickin Newton of the lazyboy !!!FWIW, it is easy to over speed(exceed governor limit) with kinetic energy. No droop.
I wish I'da learned some differential equations, I have a calc book and the solutions manual, maybe I will for giggles.Injection pump adjustment. When you mash on the go pedal with your right foot, you are compressing a coil spring which increases the force the spring can exert on the other side of the control system, the centrifugal force (centripetal acceleration X mass) opposes the spring force.
The system is designed with considerable droop, that is the drop in engine RPM with increasing load. This prevents hunting, the instability of engine control.
With the droop comes the ability to exceed the speed ceiling. It is all a bunch of partial differential equations which is beyond the scope of this thread . Plus I'm on beer #3.
My recommendation? Check your throttle vacuum regulator and transmission modulator/governor. It is highly unlikely there is an issue with the injection pump governor.
What's PUI?I've banned members or PUI.
Thought I made it clear when I posted "9 beers later and PUI is still a mystery!"Yes indeed, PUI is posting under the influence. (snip) !
This is what happens when young kids can't figure out a standard H shift pattern on a six speed transmission. Why does the scan tool show a cam and crank correlation issue at 13,000 rpms??? DOH! Don't let off the clutch pedal unless you know what gear you're in9 beers later and PUI is still a mystery!
However, now would be a good time to anwer the original question in easy terms. Engine has a governor, which can control fuel. Properly set, it protects engine from overspeed only when controlling fuel can stop speed increase.
It CANNOT protect the engine from overspeed when the load is powering it! Even shutting off all fuel cannot stop it.
Example -vehicle is going 50 MPH down a grade (80 KPH). OP manages to shift into first gear, which would be a gadzillion engine revs at 50 MPH. As long as drivetrain holds together, engine is forced to overspeed to destruction.
That is kinda what doghead said in post #8.
This is what happens when young kids can't figure out a standard H shift pattern on a six speed transmission. Why does the scan tool show a cam and crank correlation issue at 13,000 rpms??? DOH! Don't let off the clutch pedal unless you know what gear you're in
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