facthunter Posted June 6 Posted June 6 SOL is also the sun. Car motors back in the 50's did pretty short miles before needing an engine rebuild and you were always doing "something" to the car. Nev
onetrack Posted June 6 Posted June 6 The fossil fuel Farm Boy is going to get a shock soon. "Twiggy" Forrest has just purchased 360 huge battery-powered dump trucks, 55 battery-powered giant excavators and 60 new battery electric bulldozers from Liebherr, with the intention of being fossil-fuel free on his iron ore mines by 2030. That's really putting your money where your mouth is. Farm Boy is going to end up whingeing (they're good at that) about how he can't compete with his fossil-fuel tractors, when farmers with battery-powered tractors are running rings around him with lower operating costs. https://reneweconomy.com.au/fortescue-strikes-4-billion-deal-for-electric-trucks-and-dozers-to-eliminate-fossil-fuels-at-giant-mines/ 3 1
spacesailor Posted June 7 Posted June 7 Not true. I drive my " tiptronic " automatic Pajero like a manual ! . Why ?, short occasional runs leaves the battery a little less charged each time , changing to lower-gear gives a little more charge . so smarty uses the gears to slow-down , to navigate roundabouts . & Roll to the stop-light , without using those nice new brake ' shoes ' & Disk-pads I replaced this year . spacesailor
facthunter Posted June 7 Posted June 7 Alternators should charge at low revs. That's why they are superior to DC Generators with commutators. Nev 1
spacesailor Posted June 7 Posted June 7 They do. But at higher revs you get heaps more amps . I haven't had a long drive for along time . It means. More oil changes , because the oil ' on the dipstick ' is getting more each month . Not less, ( water adding to the sump reach shopping trip ) . spacesailor
facthunter Posted June 7 Posted June 7 At higher revs the output is still regulated and will not be altered by higher revs unless it's a permanent magnet thing which would be very unusual on such vehicles. 1500 engine revs would get you as much as higher revs will. The rotor is an ELECTRO Magnet and varies when the current to it does. Nev
spacesailor Posted June 7 Posted June 7 (edited) BUt at 3,000 revs it won't get the high 'amps' . Or the 12 minutes trip doesn't charge much either. I'm not rural, but relegated to that mandatory 50 k maximum speed . PLUS those five red traffic-light's . Oh , I do miss that ' open road " to anywhere. spacesailor PS. : Karumba is calling Edited June 7 by spacesailor PS added
facthunter Posted June 8 Posted June 8 Your Alternator should charge at idle speed. Are you running with your Lights on and does your dash include a Voltmeter?. Most of my vehicles never see 3,000 RPM. How quickly does the engine start? Nev 1
spacesailor Posted June 8 Posted June 8 I must check those ' revs ' , as they were only a guesstimate . But the car will stay " all alone " , locked up , in the garage , the battery looses a little bit daily by it's ' alarm system ' and all the electrical gadgets. It's one reason to go ' electric ' .no warming up , & getting a sump half-full of water . I didn't think that I had ' overfilled ' the sump after the last oilchange !, But the oil level is above the full mark now . spacesailor
octave Posted June 8 Posted June 8 32 minutes ago, spacesailor said: getting a sump half-full of water . I would suggest that water in the sump indicates a serious problem, such as a blown head gasket or cracked engine block. 1 1
facthunter Posted June 8 Posted June 8 A gallon of petrol Makes more than a gallon of water. I've seen evidence of water in Aircooled Aero engine Oil. (Cloudy). Nev 1
facthunter Posted June 8 Posted June 8 Write the chemical equation and do the atomic weights if you don't believe me. Nev 1
octave Posted June 8 Posted June 8 34 minutes ago, facthunter said: Write the chemical equation and do the atomic weights if you don't believe me. Nev I don't doubt that, you can see moisture from exhaust pipes on cold mornings, and even feel it if you put your hand near the exhaust. Water in the oil, however, is not normal and is usually a sign of serious problems. 1
spacesailor Posted June 8 Posted June 8 (edited) All IC motors create h2o ! . When cold the piston will not have expanded to seal the bore . That's the big problem of short trips . Then that steam vapour condenses onto the still cold metal And also onto the cold oil . Then that condensate sinks to the bottom & stays out of the heat . Awaiting the return trip to add a little more. my oil is nice & clear , so no worries . spacesailor PS. : A smaller motor , than my 4lt V6 , Would help to warm-up as less cold metal ' mass. ' to heat . Edited June 8 by spacesailor PS added
Marty_d Posted June 8 Posted June 8 Sounds like you need an EV Spacey. No sump, rings, pistons, cylinders, oil or petrol to worry about. 2 1
spacesailor Posted June 9 Posted June 9 Or, an " air-cooled " two-stroke. I once parked behinda VW beatle ( air-cooled )at a ' ski resort ' and was roundly told-off, " your block will freeze & crack at this hight, with it's very low temperatures " . So I had to drive a mile back down the mountain to the ( common man's ) carport . No problems with ' water in the sump ' or ' Freeze cracked block ' . spacesailor
old man emu Posted June 9 Posted June 9 A little diversions. I was at Bunnings the other day and saw a Ryobi ride-on battery powered lawn mower. It was a big one that would suit commercial use. The price tag was big, too ... $9990. 1
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