JOURNAL ARTICLE

Recent Developments in Diesel Lubricating Oils

G. L. Neely

Year: 1939 Journal:   SAE technical papers on CD-ROM/SAE technical paper series Vol: 1

Abstract

<div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>DEVELOPMENT and service properties of a new compounded diesel-engine lubricating oil are described in this paper. Properties of the oil brought out by the author include anti-ring-sticking value; prevention of lacquer formation; reduction of carbonaceous deposits; that it is non-corrosive to all types of bearing metals; and that it reduces piston-ring and cylinder wear at both high and low temperatures. Although recommended specifically for diesel engines, the oil also is suggested for gasoline engines particularly where engine deposits are troublesome.</b></div> <div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>The research program leading to the development of this product included a chemical investigation of the fundamentals of lacquer formation and ring-sticking, the construction of a special research laboratory, the design and operation of many special laboratory devices, the preparation of hundreds of chemical compounds, full-scale engine tests in the laboratory and in the field, and the construction of a plant for manufacturing the compounding material selected.</b></div> <div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>Data are presented comparing the product with straight mineral oils and corrosive-type diesel lubricants. These laboratory tests required a total of 26 engines which included 7 makes of diesel engines and a few makes of gasoline engines.</b></div> <div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>A fundamental property of lubricants is described which relates to the highest temperature at which an oil will wet a metal surface with a fluid film of sensible thickness. Data are presented showing that engine scuffing difficulties are prevented by lubricants having good spreading properties at high temperatures, and that the new lubricant possesses superior spreading characteristics to which its breaking-in and surface-conditioning properties are attributed.</b></div> <div class="htmlview paragraph"><b>The comparative economics of engine operation with this new type of lubricant and straight mineral oils is discussed. Application of the oil for cleansing or purging of both diesel and gasoline engines is explained.</b></div>

Keywords:
Diesel fuel Computer science Automotive engineering Engineering

Metrics

3
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.26
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Lubricants and Their Additives
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Tribology and Lubrication Engineering
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Mechanical Engineering
Biodiesel Production and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering

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