Goodbye To Blast Injection
It was towards the end of the 1920s that most designers concluded that the blast air-fuel injection diesel engine—with its need for large, often troublesome and energy-consuming high pressure compressors— should be displaced by the airless (or compressor-less) type.
Air-blast fuel injection called for compressed air from a pressure bottle to entrain the fuel and introduce it in a finely atomized state via a valve needle into the combustion chamber. The air-blast pressure, which was only just slightly above the ignition pressure in the cylinder, was produced by a water-cooled compressor driven off the engine connecting rod by means of a rocking lever.
Rudolf Diesel himself was never quite satisfied with this concept (which he called self-blast injection) since it was complicated and hence susceptible to failure—and also because the 'air pump' tapped as much as 15 per cent of the engine output.
Diesel had filed a patent as early as 1905 covering a concept for the solid injection of fuel, with a delivery pressure of several hundred atmospheres. A key feature was the conjoining of pump and nozzle and their shared accommodation in the cylinder head. One reason
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