- Joined
- Dec 25, 2009
- Messages
- 17,416
Yes as title says just been looking at a big engine, designed or the biggest container ships, thousands of HP, 300 ton crank, how on earth do they manage that kind of machining? Rick
Loads of info' in these links guys :thumb2 I wondered too, as I saw the crankshaft for a massive Wartsila marine diesel and wondered how the hell they did it. The crank is forged in 'U' sections, then each section is machined with an interference fit between a male and female spigot. I thought they would have used dowels too, but apparently the parts are so tightly joined it's not necessary
http://wonderfulengineering.com/worlds-largest-and-most-powerful-diesel-engine/
http://jalopnik.com/5421464/the-worlds-biggest-crankshaft
If you have a look at the figures, the efficiency in terms of HP vs displacement is pretty poor. The torque is through the roof though!!! :clap
Yep, two stroke-diesel-turbo, ohhhhh yes
In my old job, we ran a couple of Detroit 2 stroke diesel V8's, these were turbo & super charged.
They sounded awesome when we fired them up.
They were years old, but ran really sweet.
And you should see the size of the lathe they used to machine the bearing journals!!!
Notice they do not mention price Rick
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