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Journal ArticleDOI

Medium Speed Diesel Engine Noise

R. Bertodo, +1 more
- Vol. 183, Iss: 1, pp 129-152
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TLDR
A survey carried out on a large number of British and European turbocharged and water-cooled dieseis having bores in the range 2 3/4 in to 33 in (∼ 70 mm to 840 mm) clearly indicated at least two main sources of diesel engine noise: combustion and piston transverse motion in the liner clearance space.
Abstract
The paper briefly reviews past work on diesel engine noise with particular reference to medium speed engines. A survey carried out on a large number of British and European turbocharged and water-cooled dieseis having bores in the range 2 3/4 in to 33 in (∼ 70 mm to 840 mm) clearly indicated at least two main sources. A qualitative analysis of the problem suggested these to be due to combustion and piston transverse motion in the liner clearance space. None of the engines examined had an International Standards Organization rating lower than Noise Rating 85.A comparison of theoretical trends with those obtained from the survey proved encouraging and application of the analytical findings to five specific engines having bores of 5 in, 8 in, 10 1/4 in, 12 1/2 in and 14 1/4 in (∼ 127 mm, 200 mm, 260 mm, 320 mm and 360 mm) yielded reasonable estimates of the overall noise, but poor approximations to the relevant frequency spectra. Much more work on the effects of crankcase attenuation would appear in order.It...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Division of Heat and Surface Temperatures at Sliding Steel Interfaces and Their Relation to Oxidational Wear

TL;DR: In this paper, a pin-and-disk wear machine has been used to measure the division of heat at the interface between the pin and disk, together with the temperature of the surface of the pin (T8), for low-alloy, medium carbon steel specimens sliding against each other, without lubrication, at a speed of 511 m s−1 and under various loads (58 to 294 N).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Affecting diesel engine noise by the piston

TL;DR: In this article, the authors deal with the methods of affecting the piston movements and the impact of the piston, as it hits the cylinder wall, by means of measurements with pistons whose pins are not offset i.e. on which the axis of piston and pin coincide.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Comparative Study on the Dry Sliding Wear Behavior of Mild Steel and 6061Al-15wt.%SiCp Composite

TL;DR: In this paper, the dry sliding wear characteristic of 6061Al-15wt.%SiCp composite and mild steel against an alumina disk is investigated and compared at three loads (10, 30, and 50 N).
Journal ArticleDOI

Wear Behavior of an Ultra-High-Strength Eutectoid Steel

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the wear behavior of an ultra-high-strength AISI 1080 steel developed through incomplete austenitization-based combined cyclic heat treatment in comparison with annealed and conventional hardened and tempered conditions against an alumina disk using a pin-on-disk tribometer at a load range of 7.35-14.7
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Response of ribbed panels to reverberant acoustic fields

TL;DR: In this article, a statistical method for estimating the response of ribbed panels to acoustic excitation is discussed, where the acceleration spectrum of the vibrational field is related to the pressure spectrum by a coupling factor which is a simple function of the radiation and mechanical resistance of the structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Vibrations and noise due to piston-slap in reciprocating machinery

TL;DR: In this paper, the dynamics of lateral piston motions across the cylinder clearance spaces of reciprocating machines are analyzed and the results of this analysis are then applied to derive estimates for the noise and vibration produced by piston-slap impacts.
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