Monday, October 5, 2009

How to check the oil

Park the car on a level spot, turn the engine off and set the hand brake. Locate the engine oil dipstick, pull it out, wipe it off with clean cloth and insert it back. Pull it out again and have a close look. If you've never checked the oil level before, follow this link for detailed guide How to check engine oil.
If you find the oil is completely black (although for the Diesel engine black oil is normal) and (or) the oil level is very low (left picture) - suspect excessive oil consumption and (or) lack of maintenance. In either case the engine will more likely to have problems in the future. Another sign of poor maintenance would be dark stains (carbon deposits) covering the oil dipstick along its length.
Well maintained engine will more likely to have cleaner oil and the proper oil level (right picture), although this doesn't necessarily mean that the engine is in good shape; the oil just could have been changed recently.


How to check the car engine when buying a used car


Please note, this article is designed to give you an initial idea about what to look for when buying a used car and might possibly help you to avoid some used cars with potential problems, but it can not substitute for a detailed mechanical inspection performed by a professional. As a final step before purchase, take the car to a mechanic of your choice for thorough mechanical inspection. Use caution when doing any tests on a car, If you don’t feel comfortable doing any of these tests, have the car inspected by a mechanic.

Imagine, you are shopping for a used car. You enter the dealership and see that nice-looking car. You love it from a first sight. Meanwhile, the salesperson hanging around and telling you that regular story that, the car was lady driven and the engine works like a clock, and this is only "Today special" - "We need to clean inventory!", and you are so lucky because they are selling it very cheap - "We even lose money on this deal!" and that you have to give a deposit right now or else you will regret about it for the rest of your life! - Sounds familiar so far?
You decided - "deal!" - shaking hands, you're happy, salesperson is happy. Finally, you got your new wheels.
Few weeks later you notice blue smoke when you're starting the car in the morning. Few months later you discover that there is no oil left in the engine and finally got your car towed to the garage. "The engine is gone - has to be rebuilt" they diagnose.
In fact it's quite common scenario.
This article will give you an idea an may help you to avoid such a troubles buying a used car.
However, it's always good idea to have the vehicle inspected by a specialist prior purchase. This is what I'd recommend to any used car buyer.


The Clean Engine Vehicle Project
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A joint project between Empa (Internal Combustion Engines Laboratory) and ETH (Aerothermochemistry and Combustion Systems Laboratory and Measurement and Control Laboratory).

Natural gas and biogas are counted among the cleanest fuels. Modern natural gas vehicles emit less pollutants as gasoline or diesel driven vehicles and also the effect based assessment of the exhaust emissions is better: the ozone forming potential of the hydrocarbon fraction is much lower, the content on carcinogenic components as benzene, 1.3-butadiene, formaldehyde or acetaldehyde is nearly not measurable and the particulate emissions are near zero.

Natural gas vehicles have additionally a big potential for a CO2 reduction. Alone, based on the lower content of carbon in the fuel, the CO2 reduction of a natural gas driven vehicle is about 20%, compared with a gasoline vehicle. Based on the high knock resistance of natural gas, advanced dedicated natural gas vehicles can be optimized regarding higher energy efficiency. Such vehicles have the potential for a CO2 reduction of 30%.

With the project “Clean Engine Vehicle”, Empa and ETH demonstrated the potential of such an optimized natural gas vehicle regarding pollutants and CO2 reduction with todays engine technology. Within the project, an actual gasoline driven engine was converted to dedicated natural gas operation, the compression ratio has been optimized, a catalytic converter was developed and a downsizing concept (supercharging with boost control and gear box modifications) was realized. Aim of the project was a CO2-reduction of 30% in the official European driving cycle compared with a similar powered gasoline vehicle and the compliance with the most stringent European and Californian exhaust gas limits for Euro-4 and Super-Ultra-Low-Emission-Vehicles (SULEV).

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Fig. 1
The pollutants could be reduced below the targeted limits (Fig. 1). The NOx concentrations were after a driving distance of about 300 m after cold start even in transient driving always lower at tailpipe then in the intake air of the engine (Fig. 2).
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Fig. 2
Compared with a gasoline engine with similar performance, the CO2 emissions could be reduced at 31% (Fig 3). The most important CO2 reduction of 22% could be realised by the conversion to natural gas operation and is based on the lower carbon content of natural gas compared with gasoline.
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Fig. 3
Simultaneously, the maximum engine power was reduced at about 15% by the gas induced reduction of engine filling. The increase of compression ratio resulted in a further CO2 reduction of 2.7% and the maximum engine power could be increased by 6.5%. The supercharging and gearbox modifications reduced the CO2 emissions again by 3.4% and increased the maximum engine power by 33%. With all this measures, the maximum engine power was increased by 20% compared with the basic 1.0 l gasoline engine.

Internal combustion engine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

An automobile engine partly opened and colored to show components

The internal combustion engine is an engine in which thecombustion of a fuel occurs with an oxidizer (usually air) in acombustion chamber. In an internal combustion engine the expansion of the high temperature and pressure gases, which are produced by the combustion, directly applies force to a movable component of the engine, such as the pistons or turbine blades and by moving it over a distance, generate useful mechanicalenergy.[1][2][3][4]

The term internal combustion engine usually refers to an engine in which combustion is intermittent, such as the more familiar four-stroke and two-stroke piston engines, along with variants, such as the Wankel rotary engine. A second class of internal combustion engines use continuous combustion:gas turbines, jet engines and most rocket engines, each of which are internal combustion engines on the same principle as previously described.[1][2][3][4]

The internal combustion engine (or ICE) is quite different from external combustion engines, such assteam or Stirling engines, in which the energy is delivered to a working fluid not consisting of, mixed with or contaminated by combustion products. Working fluids can be air, hot water, pressurised water or even liquid sodium, heated in some kind of boiler by fossil fuel, wood-burning, nuclear, solar etc.

A large number of different designs for ICEs have been developed and built, with a variety of different strengths and weaknesses. Powered by an energy-dense fuel (which is very frequently petrol, a liquid derived from fossil fuels) the ICE delivers an excellent power-to-weight ratio with few safety or other disadvantages. While there have been and still are many stationary applications, the real strength of internal combustion engines is in mobile applications and they dominate as a power supply for cars, aircraft, and boats, from the smallest to the biggest. Only for hand-held power tools do they share part of the market with battery powered devices.

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Vehicle Technology
Research

maincurve image

The VTR Centre brings together research groups in four areas associated with vehicles, engines and fuels.
Sustainability, environmental concerns, user safety and comfort are the common factors for future designs, and intelligent assembly is part of future manufacturing.
The Centre is situated within the School of Mechanical Engineering.

Research Groups

  • Future Power Systems
    New technologies for super-clean and efficient combustion, new bio-fuels, fuel pre-treatment (hydrogen from fuel reforming) and exhaust aftertreatment, non-metallic gears and novel engines. Major projects with Jaguar-LandRover Research, Johnson Matthey, Shell Global Solutions UK and Deutz UK.
  • Railway System Engineering
    Should passengers have priority over freight? Is speed more important than reliability? What about capacity? Do countries need railways, and at what cost? How about the future?
  • Vehicle Dynamics
    Four poster whole vehicle ride testing rig, whole vehicle endurance testing, vehicle modal vibration response testing, vehicle suspension rig.
  • Automation and Intelligent Manufacturing (AIM)
    Flexible Automation and Robotics, Automotive and Aerospace Assembly Systems, Holonic Manufacturing Systems.

Henry Ford used to say that his customers could have any colour car they liked as long as it was black. Today the dominant hue is green

Vehicle Technology
Automotive Safety

Vehicle Technology
Formula SAE

Railway System Engineering
Railway System Engineering

Vehicle Technology

Advanced Vehicle Technology Competitions for Students

Since 1987, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has sponsored more than 45 advanced vehicle technology competitions through Argonne National Laboratory. These competitions represent a unique coalition of government, industry and academic partners who have joined forces to explore sustainable vehicle solutions. Argonne organizes and operates these competitions to

  • Accelerate the development and demonstration of technologies of interest to DOE and the automotive industry
  • Provide the automotive industry with a new generation of engineering leaders with highly desirable experience
  • Help prepare the market to accept advanced vehicle technologies.

Challenge X 2007 California Workshop
Challenge X teams and their vehicles at the grande finale, Washington, D.C., May 2008.
Mississippi State University's vehicle won first place in the competition.

Focusing on graduate and undergraduate engineering students, these competitions target ultra-efficient vehicle designs, hybrid electric vehicles, and alternative fuel vehicles for development, demonstration, and testing. They emphasize current or future vehicle technology; students work with production vehicles (donated by vehicle manufacturers) to improve their energy efficiency and to meet the toughest emissions standards while maintaining performance and functionality. Extensive data are collected to measure the real-world performance of advanced technologies and benchmark their developmental status.

The competitions represent a unique coalition of government and industry aimed at eliminating technical and institutional barriers to acceptance of advanced vehicle technologies and alternative fuels. The competitions are highly valued and supported by automotive manufacturers, suppliers, fuel providers, and the educational community. Auto industry experts judge events, interact with students, and compare technologies. Federal funding for the competitions is heavily leveraged by industry contributions.

Conducting competitions provides significant technical, educational, and promotional benefits to DOE and the nation. More than 16,000 students from more than 600 institutions from the United States, Canada, and Mexico have participated, gaining real-world, hands-on experience tackling the challenges associated with building more fuel-efficient vehicles.

The competitions continue to grow in sophistication and complexity. Both Ford and General Motors have made a commitment to long-term support for these competitions on the basis of their benefits in technology development and demonstration.

Military Vehicle Technology




The Military Vehicle Technology Foundation oversees one of the largest and most significant collections of historical military vehicles in the world. Our goal is to acquire, restore, and interpret the historical significance of 20th and 21st century military vehicles. Domestic and foreign combat vehicles such as tanks, armored cars, self-propelled artillery, and other technically interesting mobile platforms are the focus of the collection. We also maintain an extensive technical library that describes many vehicles down to the part level. Aside from the vehicles, there are towed artillery, antitank, and antiaircraft guns. Military support equipment, inert ordnance, and accessories round out the collection.

The MVTF website is currently undergoing intense modifications and updates. There are over 200 vehicles in the Foundation's collection, many of them exceedingly rare. The updated site will have greatly increased content and information on the collection, as well as information on how to book tours or arrange access for commercial purposes. The MVTF is recognized by the IRS as a 501(c) 3 corporation. Donations are considered fully tax-deductible as allowed by law.

General inquiries about the Military Vehicle Technology Foundation may be sent to:inquiries.mvtf@gmail.com

MVTF Museum
Visual Tour:
Military Vehicle Technology Foundatio



Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Vehicle

Automobiles are among the most commonly used engine-powered vehicles

A vehicle (Latin: vehiculum) is a mechanical means of conveyance, a carriage or transport. Most often they are manufactured (e.g. bicycles, cars, motorcycles, trains, ships,boats, and aircraft), although some other means of transportwhich are not made by humans also may be called vehicles; examples include icebergs and floating tree trunks.

Vehicles may be propelled or pulled by engines or animalsincluding humans, for instance, a chariot, a stagecoach, a mule-drawn barge, an ox-cart or rickshaw. However, animals on their own, though used as a means of transport, are not called vehicles, but rather beasts of burden or draft animals. This distinction includes humans carrying another human, for example a child or a disabled person. Means of transport without a vehicle or animal would include walking, running, crawling, or swimming.

Vehicles that do not travel on land often are called craft, such as watercraft, sailcraft, aircraft,hovercraft, and spacecraft

Land vehicles are classified broadly by what is used to apply steering and drive forces against the ground: wheeled, tracked, railed, or skied.

Types of vehicles

[edit]Bicycle

A pedal-powered quadracycleparked on a Canadian urban street amongst the cars
see Bicycles (see also Vehicular Cycling)
see main article History of the bicycle

[edit]Rickshaw

A rickshaw is a vehicle that may carry a human and be powered by a human, but it is the mechanical form or cart that is powered by the human that is labeled as the vehicle. For some human-powered vehicles the human providing the power is labeled as a driver.

[edit]Tricycle

see Tricycle

[edit]Quadracycle

see Quadracycle (human-powered vehicle)

[edit]Velomobile

see Velomobile

[edit]Electric road carriages

see electric vehicle
see history of the electric vehicle

[edit]Steam road carriage

see steam car

[edit]Steam tricycle

See steam tricycle

At the other end of the scale, much lighter steam vehicles have been constructed such as the steam tricycle from the Comte de Dion in 1887.

[edit]Petroleum (gasoline / diesel) motor-carriages

See Benz Patent Motorwagen
See Ford's model T
See Automobile

[edit]Road trains

A road train consists of a conventional heavy truck pulling three trailers or more, used in rural areas of Australia to move bulky loads such as livestock efficiently.

[edit]Motorcycles

See Motorcycle
See Gottlieb Daimler

[edit]Rail-vehicles

see Trains
see Trams

[edit]Road vehicles

see Cars
see Buses
see Trucks
see Vans

[edit]Water vehicles

see Boats
see Ships

[edit]Under-water vehicles

see submarines
see submersibles
see diving bells
see diving chambers

[edit]Land and water vehicles

see Amphibious vehicle
see Amphibious ATV
see Hovercraft

[edit]Air vehicles

see aircraft
see Wing-In-Ground effect vehicle

[edit]Rocket and space vehicles

see spacecraft
see rocket
see launch escape capsule
see ejection seat

[edit]Snow vehicles

see snowmobile

[edit]Other types of vehicles

A rickshaw is a vehicle that is powered by a human