sewerzuk
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Everybody seems to like to discuss this, and I have run across my fair share of diesel engines that have experienced it. But today, I wrenched on an -005a that had the worst case of wet stacking I've ever seen...
It was a backup generator for a business that faithfully ran it for 1 hour each month, under zero load. It hadn't seen any load for years, accumulating several hundred hours of runtime at no load. Total hours were under 500.
The new owner of this set trailered it down to me so I could give it a look-over and short load test.
I fired it up and let it run for a minute or two under no load to warm it up, then put a 5kw load on it (1/6 rated load). It dropped almost 5hz under that load indicating an engine that was pretty weak; but after a minute or two it recovered. I bumped it up to 15kw; white smoke POURED out of the exhaust, and the engine nearly stalled. Black, tarry, oily junk began to run out of every seam in the exhaust system. I backed it down to about 10kw (1/3 of rated load), which the engine was barely able to pull. After about 15 minutes, tiny burning chunks of carbon were raining down out of the sky, and about a 40ft radius around the generator was covered in soot. The engine had began to run smoother at this point, so I bumped it up to 20kW (2/3 rated load). It was barely able to pull this load at first, but after another several minutes of smoke and carbon "rain", it recovered and was back to 60hz. I bumped it up to 30kW for the final step and experienced the same thing. I ran it there for over an hour. Every 5 minutes or so I had to adjust the throttle down to bring it back down to 60hz (engine was beginning to make more power as the buildup burned off of the valves/rings/cylinder walls/etc.). After roughly an hour at 100% load, the engine was purring away and had almost zero smoke in the exhaust. It was even able to pull a 50kW load (166% rated load) without significant droop.
Obviously, this was pretty extreme. But, those monthly maintenance runs almost rendered the set useless! It couldn't even pull a 5kw load. Had this been an -006 (or some other set with a turbo) it probably wouldn't be running at all. It is a good lesson in sizing the set appropriately, and putting a load on it when it does run.
It was a backup generator for a business that faithfully ran it for 1 hour each month, under zero load. It hadn't seen any load for years, accumulating several hundred hours of runtime at no load. Total hours were under 500.
The new owner of this set trailered it down to me so I could give it a look-over and short load test.
I fired it up and let it run for a minute or two under no load to warm it up, then put a 5kw load on it (1/6 rated load). It dropped almost 5hz under that load indicating an engine that was pretty weak; but after a minute or two it recovered. I bumped it up to 15kw; white smoke POURED out of the exhaust, and the engine nearly stalled. Black, tarry, oily junk began to run out of every seam in the exhaust system. I backed it down to about 10kw (1/3 of rated load), which the engine was barely able to pull. After about 15 minutes, tiny burning chunks of carbon were raining down out of the sky, and about a 40ft radius around the generator was covered in soot. The engine had began to run smoother at this point, so I bumped it up to 20kW (2/3 rated load). It was barely able to pull this load at first, but after another several minutes of smoke and carbon "rain", it recovered and was back to 60hz. I bumped it up to 30kW for the final step and experienced the same thing. I ran it there for over an hour. Every 5 minutes or so I had to adjust the throttle down to bring it back down to 60hz (engine was beginning to make more power as the buildup burned off of the valves/rings/cylinder walls/etc.). After roughly an hour at 100% load, the engine was purring away and had almost zero smoke in the exhaust. It was even able to pull a 50kW load (166% rated load) without significant droop.
Obviously, this was pretty extreme. But, those monthly maintenance runs almost rendered the set useless! It couldn't even pull a 5kw load. Had this been an -006 (or some other set with a turbo) it probably wouldn't be running at all. It is a good lesson in sizing the set appropriately, and putting a load on it when it does run.
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