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Page Title: Cylinder Sleeve or Bore
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Figure 3   Cross Section of a V-type Four Stroke Diesel Engine
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Mechanical Science Volume 1 of 2
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Piston  and  Piston  Rings

DIESEL ENGINES DOE-HDBK-1018/1-93 Diesel Engine Fundamentals The  Cylinder  Block The cylinder block, as shown in Figure 4, is generally a single unit made from cast iron. In  a liquid-cooled  diesel, the block  also provides  the structure  and rigid frame  for the engine's  cylinders,  water  coolant  and  oil  passages,  and  support  for  the  crankshaft  and camshaft bearings. Figure 4   The Cylinder Block Crankcase  and  Oil  Pan The crankcase is usually located on the bottom of the cylinder block.   The crankcase is defined as the area around the crankshaft and crankshaft bearings.  This area encloses the rotating crankshaft and crankshaft counter weights and directs returning oil into the oil pan.   The  oil  pan is  located  at  the bottom  of  the  crankcase as  shown  in Figure  2  and Figure 3.   The oil pan collects and stores the engine's supply of lubricating oil.   Large diesel engines may have the oil pan divided into several separate pans. Cylinder  Sleeve  or  Bore Diesel engines use one of two types of cylinders.   In one type, each cylinder is simply machined  or  bored  into  the  block  casting,  making  the  block  and  cylinders  an  integral part.  In the second type, a machined steel sleeve is pressed into the block casting to form the cylinder.   Figure 2 and Figure 3 provide examples of sleeved diesel engines.   With either  method,  the  cylinder  sleeve  or  bore  provides  the  engine  with  the  cylindrical structure needed to confine the combustion gasses and to act as a guide for the engine's pistons. ME-01 Rev. 0 Page 6

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