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Dave
 
Posts: n/a
Default stopping a diesel

A side note to this;
I was told years ago of diesel backhoes that, when accidently hitting
natural gas pipelines...would ramp up RPMs from the "free" fuel mix,
till rods, etc busted. Or worse.

~Dave

Greg O wrote:

"Engineman1" wrote in message
...
A friend just bought a yacth with twin Hino diesels. They are started by a

key
switch but when they you want to shut them off you have to press a stop

button
until the engines quit, then turn the keys off. I don't have much

experience
with diesels but years ago when I had a job repairing forklifts I ran into

a
similar situation.
This seems to me to be unecesaralary complicated. After all, most diesel
powered cars turn on and off with a key switch. I have asked many people

this
question but have gotten answers that didn,t seem plausible. So now I'm

asking
the experts.
Thoughts?
Engineman1


Some diesels have a normally open fuel solenoid in the injection pump. You
need to apply power to the solenoids to stop the flow of fuel. The shut down
may be a solenoid the pushed the injection rack to a position that causes
the pump to stop delivering fuel. Either way you need a few seconds of power
applied to the kill wire. Simplest, least problematic it a plain old
normally open push button. One nice feature of a shut down like this is the
engine does not need any electrical power to run, once it is running it will
go 'till it runs out of fuel or is intentionally shut down. It increases the
dependability somewhat by not needing power to run
Greg


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