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Yokel
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Opposed-Piston Engine Achieves Significant Emissions Milestone - Fuel Smarts - Trucking Info
https://www.truckinginfo.com/1...c_id=3914G4595089E5H


Opposed-Piston Engine Achieves Significant Emissions Milestone
December 17, 2020 • by HDT Staff
Opposed-piston engine technology has been touted as a possible alternative to conventional engine designs for years. Now, opposed-piston engine developer Achates Power reports that its 10.6L opposed-piston heavy-duty powertrain has achieved performance results that comply with pending 2027 requirements of the Environmental Protection Agency and California to sharply reduce emissions of nitrogen oxides (NOx).

The engine and aftertreatment system development and performance assessments were conducted at the Achates Power facility in San Diego and the Aramco Research Center-Detroit, the company said. According to a company spokesman, the latest results are a testing update on the demonstration engine announced 2 years ago. Peterbilt has integrated the test engine into a Model 579 tractor and the vehicle is slated for on-highway testing next year.
Opposed-piston engines have two pistons per cylinder, facing each other, and a central combustion chamber. Explosive fuel burn pushes the pistons apart, and their connecting rods twist separate crankshafts at each end of the cylinder. Through pulleys and gears, the crankshafts transfer their power to a single output shaft. Ports in the cylinders allow entry of air and expulsion of exhaust gases, and pistons compress and fire every time they meet — a two-stroke design, made famous by General Motors and Detroit diesels starting in the 1930s. Like them, an Achates opposing-piston engine has no intake or exhaust valves, but no heavy cylinder heads, either.

Advocates for the technology claim it is a simpler design that can deliver as much as a 30% improvement in fuel economy over conventional diesel engine configurations.

Achates said in a statement its findings are a major development for a project that aims to improve the environmental performance of commercial vehicles. The most recent test of the engine, including aftertreatment, measured 0.02g per brake horsepower-hour (g bhp/hr), demonstrating the capability of the engine to be certified under California’s ultra-low NOx regulation, which requires diesel commercial vehicle engines to reduce NOx by 90% by 2027 – to no more than 0.02g bhp/hr over the Federal Test Procedure cycle.

Furthermore, the company said, the 10.6L was measured at more than 8% below the current standard of 460g CO2, exceeding the 2027 EPA regulations of 432g of CO2 over the Supplemental Emissions Test cycle. These results were achieved with a conventional, underfloor-only, single diesel exhaust fluid injection aftertreatment system, which makes the whole powertrain system less complex and less expensive, and reduces the risk of non-compliance with emissions regulations, according to Achates.

“These results show that the opposed-piston technology is able to meet our sustainable transportation goals, reducing criteria pollutants while also emitting less carbon dioxide,” said David Crompton, president and CEO, Achates Power, in a news release. “At a time when the industry is contemplating many technology options to address clean energy, it’s important to have pragmatic solutions in the conversation that can have more immediate impact, and meeting or beating the most stringent regulations with less cost and complexity and no reliance on enabling infrastructure is compelling.”

The 10.6L opposed-piston engine was developed as part of a demonstration project, led by Calstart and funded by the California Air Resources Board, to demonstrate a low-CO2, ultralow-NOx, opposed-piston heavy-duty diesel engine. In addition to CARB, the South Coast Air Quality Management District, the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District, and the Sacramento Metro Air Quality Management District are providing funding for the program.



You Tube https://youtu.be/-xRxLKiZV-k



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Posts: 3878 | Location: Vallejo, CA | Registered: August 18, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Yokel
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https://youtu.be/UF5j1DvC954



Beware the man who only has one gun. He probably knows how to use it! - John Steinbeck
 
Posts: 3878 | Location: Vallejo, CA | Registered: August 18, 2007Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Cool!

I remember reading about these being used in locomotives as a kid and built what I thought how it worked out of Legos and swear words.

It is good to see forgotten ideas resurrected and modernized instead of rehashing the same thing over and over.



 
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Baroque Bloke
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When I was a kid – a long time ago – the electric power plant of my small hometown was powered by Diesel engines of this design.

The original purpose of these particular engines was to power submarines. Surfaced or snorkeling.



Serious about crackers
 
Posts: 9725 | Location: San Diego | Registered: July 26, 2014Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Thanks much for introducing this topic. Fascinating!

Silent
 
Posts: 1060 | Registered: February 02, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Fairbanks has been making O.P.engines used in locomotives, towboats, ships and stationary applications for many years. The most common engines have an 8 1/8" bore. The smallest I have seen had a 5 1/4" bore.Making truck sized O.P.s will be interesting.
 
Posts: 976 | Location: Confluence of Mississippi & Ohio Rivers | Registered: October 12, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Tinker Sailor Soldier Pie
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quote:
Originally posted by Humbug:
Fairbanks has been making O.P.engines used in locomotives, towboats, ships and stationary applications for many years. The most common engines have an 8 1/8" bore. The smallest I have seen had a 5 1/4" bore.Making truck sized O.P.s will be interesting.


Early in my shipping career I worked briefly as an engineer on a tug boat with a Fairbanks opposed piston engine. It was a pretty cool piece of machinery.


~Alan

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