Filtration of Lubrication Oil in Railway Applications

Author(s):  
Stefan Schmitz ◽  
Ru¨diger Lennartz

Traditional designs, using cartridge filters for full-flow filtration, protect medium speed and high speed diesel engines from wear and keep the concentration of abrasive particles in the oil system down by collecting them out of the circulating oil flow. After several hundred running hours the filtration surface is saturated, the cartridges get exchanged and disposed. State of the art automatic filters protect the engines against wear with the same efficiency as the cartridge filters but the backflushing mechanism keeps the filtration surface clean and the lubrication circuit remains maintenance free. The lifetime of filter elements lasts during time before overhaul (TBO) of the engine itself and is at least 24,000 hrs. The job to discharge the particles out of the system is done by highly efficient centrifugal oil cleaners in by-pass operation which separate not only the particles retained by the automatic filter but also very fine solids like soot. Figure 1 shows an automatic filter in cooperation with two centrifugal oil cleaners build into the silhouette of the engine.

2011 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 2240-2256 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlo Alberto Rinaldini ◽  
Enrico Mattarelli ◽  
Valeri Golovitchev

2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pieter Roels ◽  
Yves Sledsens ◽  
Sebastian Verhelst ◽  
Roger Sierens ◽  
Lieven Vervaeke

Author(s):  

The necessity of adapting diesel engines to work on vegetable oils is justified. The possibility of using rapeseed oil and its mixtures with petroleum diesel fuel as motor fuels is considered. Experimental studies of fuel injection of small high-speed diesel engine type MD-6 (1 Ch 8,0/7,5)when using diesel oil and rapeseed oil and computational studies of auto-tractor diesel engine type D-245.12 (1 ChN 11/12,5), working on blends of petroleum diesel fuel and rapeseed oil. When switching autotractor diesel engine from diesel fuel to rapeseed oil in the full-fuel mode, the mass cycle fuel supply increased by 12 %, and in the small-size high-speed diesel engine – by about 27 %. From the point of view of the flow of the working process of these diesel engines, changes in other parameters of the fuel injection process are less significant. Keywords diesel engine; petroleum diesel fuel; vegetable oil; rapeseed oil; high pressure fuel pump; fuel injector; sprayer


1975 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. C. Owens ◽  
E. A. Frame ◽  
Walter Bryzik

1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul D. Wiczynski ◽  
Siegfried Mielke ◽  
Richard Conrow

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