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Engine  Lubrication
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Mechanical Science Volume 1 of 2
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Air  Intake  System

DIESEL ENGINES DOE-HDBK-1018/1-93 Diesel Engine Fundamentals Oil is accumulated and stored in the engine's oil pan where one or more oil pumps take a suction and pump the oil through one or more oil filters as shown in Figure 12.   The filters clean the oil and remove any metal that the oil has picked up due to wear.   The cleaned  oil  then  flows  up  into  the  engine's  oil  galleries.    A  pressure  relief  valve(s) maintains oil pressure in the galleries and returns oil to the oil pan upon high pressure. The oil galleries distribute the oil to all the bearing surfaces in the engine. Once the oil has cooled and lubricated the bearing surfaces, it flows out of the bearing and gravity-flows back into the oil pan.  In medium to large diesel engines, the oil is also cooled before being distributed into the block.  This is accomplished by either an internal or external oil cooler.   The lubrication system also supplies oil to the engine's governor, which is discussed later in this module. Fuel  System All  diesel  engines  require  a method  to  store and  deliver  fuel to  the engine.     Because diesel  engines  rely  on  injectors  which  are  precision  components  with  extremely  tight tolerances  and  very  small  injection  hole(s),  the  fuel  delivered  to  the  engine  must  be extremely clean and free of contaminants. The  fuel  system  must,  therefore, Figure 13   Diesel Engine Fuel Flowpath not  only  deliver  the  fuel  but  also ensure   its   cleanliness. This   is usually   accomplished   through   a series of in-line filters. Commonly,    the    fuel    will    be filtered  once   outside  the   engine and then the fuel will pass through at least one more filter internal to the  engine,  usually  located  in  the fuel line at each fuel injector. In a diesel engine, the fuel system is  much  more  complex  than  the fuel  system  on  a  simple  gasoline engine because the fuel serves two purposes. One     purpose     is obviously  to  supply  the  fuel  to  run  the  engine;  the  other  is  to  act  as  a  coolant  to  the injectors.  To meet this second purpose, diesel fuel is kept continuously flowing through the  engine's  fuel  system  at  a  flow  rate  much  higher  than  required  to  simply  run  the engine, an example of a fuel flowpath is shown in Figure 13.   The excess fuel is routed back to the fuel pump or the fuel storage tank depending on the application. ME-01 Rev. 0 Page 14

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