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VP44 PSG fuel cooler ideas


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A bit about thermal conductivity...

http://www.matbase.com/material-categories/other-materials/fuels/material-properties-of-diesel.html#properties shows the thermal conductivity of diesel fuel at 0.15 W/m.K

Compare that to air, water & aluminum on this chart... http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/thermal-conductivity-d_429.html

 

Just something to ponder.....

Ed

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Nice work Ed.  I'll be reading up.....

 

On another note, like I mentioned before, there's considerable effort in the European and Spanish folks whereby they've dealt with the PSG and transistor I think way more than we have over here.  Matter of a fact, just for sake of the thread, here's a picture of someone who actually tried to shade tree fix the PSG and a link to another foreign thread http://www.forum-auto.com/pole-technique/mecanique-electronique/sujet537674-35.htm where they're experimenting with soldering in the circuits and replacing parts.  I cant read the language but if anyone's bilingual then maybe you can make out what they're doing or even if it worked.

 

But back to my "theory" about simple electrical strain or surges placed on the PSG, you'll notice that the high pressure solenoid and the timing solenoid both connect to the PSG right at the transistor.  Coincidence?.....not sure.  But below is a couple more web pages with some interesting info regarding Pb free solder and how it reacts to heat, contraction, expansion, and surface warping. http://product.tdk.com/en/techjournal/archives/vol05_mlcc/contents06.html  I found it interesting but still not understanding why the main failure of the PSG is the transistor.....

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OK,   so  'transistor'      (transformer-resistor)  correct??

 

Here you go..

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transistor

 

Transistor as a switch
150px-Transistor_as_switch.svg.png
magnify-clip.png

Transistors are commonly used as electronic switches, both for high-power applications such as switched-mode power supplies and for low-power applications such as logic gates.

In a grounded-emitter transistor circuit, such as the light-switch circuit shown, as the base voltage rises, the emitter and collector currents rise exponentially. The collector voltage drops because of reduced resistance from collector to emitter. If the voltage difference between the collector and emitter were zero (or near zero), the collector current would be limited only by the load resistance (light bulb) and the supply voltage. This is called saturation because current is flowing from collector to emitter freely. When saturated, the switch is said to be on.[29]

Providing sufficient base drive current is a key problem in the use of bipolar transistors as switches. The transistor provides current gain, allowing a relatively large current in the collector to be switched by a much smaller current into the base terminal. The ratio of these currents varies depending on the type of transistor, and even for a particular type, varies depending on the collector current. In the example light-switch circuit shown, the resistor is chosen to provide enough base current to ensure the transistor will be saturated.

In any switching circuit, values of input voltage would be chosen such that the output is either completely off,[30] or completely on. The transistor is acting as a switch, and this type of operation is common in digital circuits where only "on" and "off" values are relevant.

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This thread reminds me of a problem I had with a Sea Ray Cabin cruiser I used to own.  The fuel would get hot and vapor lock.  The boat had a 110 gallon tank and even that was not enough to keep the fuel cool enough on really hot days with that 454 running hard.  What I finally did was to buy a Moroso Insultated Cool Can.  The concept was pretty simple.  The can held a good bit of ice and was well insulated. the ice would last about 4 hours give or take.  Once the ice melted enough to create a liquid chilled bath around the fuel heat exchanger, maximum cooling was achieved.  Once I installed the cool can, I never had another problem.  I did not use is all the time, only when it was really hot and humid.  

 

I would think this might be a very cheap and VERY simple alternative for cooling the diesel fuel right before it goes into the VP-44.  During cool times of the year, you don't fill it with ice and just run the engine like it is not there as it is plumbed into the fuel system. 

 

Probably not what you guys are thinking of but I figured I would throw it out there.  Simple is better in my book. 

 

http://www.jegs.com/i/Moroso/710/65125/10002/-1

Edited by LiveOak
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Thanks Mike,  So,  in a roundabout way,   the  schematic shown  is    kinda like a   relay...  but in this  case,   it is  using  voltage differential  in  one  circuit  (if it  goes up or down)   to   either  open or close the switch  for another.

 

 

Man,   I  can almost  'see'  what  dirty  AC  would  do here!     Poor little  dude  going  beyond the call of duty!   Instead of  smooth  DC,  it'd be  hammered  with  mixed  signal  AC  dirty..   the  field  would  be  building, collapsing,  and  rebuilding at the rate of  the  'noise'..    gotta be a  heat builder for sure!

Edited by rancherman
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even the russians have the issue, check this out...

 

http://forum.opelclub-by.com/index.php?showtopic=20908&mode=linearplus

 

look at the nice close ups they took, the wire lead is melted into a pool and the transistor is deformed...

 

i think they took the pic from elsewhere. but still that thing is getting a high heat load from something to melt wire leads.

Edited by CUMMINSDIESELPWR
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Nice work Ed.  I'll be reading up.....

 

On another note, like I mentioned before, there's considerable effort in the European and Spanish folks whereby they've dealt with the PSG and transistor I think way more than we have over here.  Matter of a fact, just for sake of the thread, here's a picture of someone who actually tried to shade tree fix the PSG and a link to another foreign thread http://www.forum-auto.com/pole-technique/mecanique-electronique/sujet537674-35.htm where they're experimenting with soldering in the circuits and replacing parts.  I cant read the language but if anyone's bilingual then maybe you can make out what they're doing or even if it worked.

 

 

Here is the Google translation for this site: https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=auto&tl=en&js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.forum-auto.com%2Fpole-technique%2Fmecanique-electronique%2Fsujet537674-35.htm&edit-text=&act=url

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so my theory is, the transistor is a switch of higher voltage via a low voltage input signal.  whatever the load is being put through the high side of the transistor is either too great or the ability of heat dissipation is too small. Remember the thermal load on this little guy is wafer thin stuck on a big block of HOT metal, the heat generated has nowhere to go except in its small thermal footprint and "poof"...

 

Or there are voltage surges spiking after time that finally put it 6' under.

 

or an AC voltage erroneously hits and poof...

 

or gremlins...?

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Just thinking outside the box here...if it is an AC pulse that kills the little guy.

Would it be possible to to put a small diode  (think thats the name) in the power supply for the PSG.

Or are there a bunch of wires that supply current. I do know that part of my checks were battery voltage to 1 wire, not sure about the others in the harness there.

Regards Chris

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Just thinking outside the box here...if it is an AC pulse that kills the little guy.

Would it be possible to to put a small diode  (think thats the name) in the power supply for the PSG.

Or are there a bunch of wires that supply current. I do know that part of my checks were battery voltage to 1 wire, not sure about the others in the harness there.

Regards Chris

 

Just like putting a noise filter on the PCM for torque converter lockup issues. Now you have protected the PCM or VP44 but now the other devices take the AC noise as well. Remember its just easier to keep a clean alternator than to attempt to filter every single device and prevent AC noise introduction. Again I'm on the home stretch of 200k on this pump. No other device issues either.

 

It would be easier to just remove the alternator and then there is no more AC noise issues period. Pure DC power solely from the batteries.

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