Cowcatcher wrote:
In reading some of the recent comments in tdifferent threads on "runaway diesels" I got to thinking about how that could happen if you cut the fuel...how cna it continue to run only on air. The thought quickly turned to how does this thing turn off.
Any other diesel I have run you killed the engine by killing the fuel. On my JD wheel tractor you are even cautioned to not turn the key off until after you have killed the motor.
So, how do our CRD's stop? I assume there must be a fuel feed cutoff somewhere that is electrical.
Cowcatcher -
The main fuel feed cutoff on the CRD should be the injectors themselves, since they are electrically actuated. So the injectors quit providing fuel, and the FCV valve shuts off air. This valve on an older diesel was referred to an anti-shudder valve, if my memory serves me correctly ....
You can get a runaway diesel IF you are introducing some sort of "fuel" into the system; it doesn't have to be diesel fuel provided thru the injectors. If, for instance, you are pulling in enough oil through the intake system, and then through the intake valve and into the combustion chamber, as the engine continues to spin & compress the air, the oil can auto-ignite, continuing the combustion process & keeping the engine running. The way the CRD shuts off *should* be a combination of 2 things; you close the FCV valve, which should starve the engine of air, and you shut off power to the injectors, which starves the engine of fuel. I would think that a runaway diesel with electronic/electric injectors AND an FCV valve would be a rarity, and pretty much ALMOST impossible. That, of course, is allowing for the FCV valve to be functioning correctly and shutting off enough air to prevent combustion ...