The Cylinder Liner
Transcription
The Cylinder Liner
The Cylinder Liner (Diesel Engines) Source: MAN B&W Cylinder Liner • The function of cylinder liner is to form part of the combustion chamber which is compression and combustion of fuel/air mixture take place • The cylinder liner forms the cylindrical space in which the piston reciprocates. The reasons for manufacturing the liner separately from the cylinder block (jacket) in which it is located are as follows; •The liner can be manufactured using a superior material to the cylinder block. While the cylinder block is made from a grey cast iron, the liner is manufactured from a cast iron alloyed with chromium, vanadium and molybdenum. (cast iron contains graphite, a lubricant. The alloying elements help resist corrosion and improve the wear resistance at high temperatures.) •The cylinder liner will wear with use, and therefore may have to be replaced. The cylinder jacket lasts the life of the engine. •At working temperature, the liner is a lot hotter than the jacket. The liner will expand more and is free to expand diametrically and lengthwise. If they were cast as one piece, then unacceptable thermal stresses would be set up, causing fracture of the material. •Less risk of defects. The more complex the casting, the more difficult to produce a homogenous casting with low residual stresses. Cylinder Liner - Types • Wet liners – usually used in medium and slow speed engines and normally cooling by water • Dry liner – used for small engine like life boat engine etc which is the engine block built with fins and the cooling agent will be an air 3 –PIECES LINER (DOXFORD’P’) COOLING WATER OUT EXHAUST PORTS EXHAUST BELT UPPER LUBRICATION COOPER RING STEEL SHRUNK RING UPPER LINER UPPER LINER VALVE POCKET COMBUSTION BELT COMBUSTION BELT COOLING WATER IN LOWER LUBRICATION LOWER LINER SCAVENGE PORTS TRIPARTITE (3 PARTS) CYLINDER LINER AND JACKET (DOXFORD ‘P’TYPE CYLINDER OIL SUPPLY GROUND FACE COOLING WATER OUT TO COVER CYLINDER LUBRICATION OIL 8 POINTS JACKET UPPER COOLED PART COOLING WATER IN ABESTOS PACKING Copper ring TELL TALE LEAK OFF EXHAUST PORTS SCAVENGE PORTS CYLINDER LUBRICATION OIL 2 POINTS SOME COOLING OUT WAVE JOINT SUPPLEMENTARY CYLINDER OIL SUPPLY LOWER UNCOOLED PART BOLTED TO JACKET MAN KZ LINER (2 PIECES) RND SULZER (ONE PIECE) HYPERBOLIC COOLING PASSAGES C/W OUT TO CYL HEAD THICK COLLAR COMBUSTION SPACE ABOVE JACKET GROUND FACE CYLINDER OIL SUPPLY ANGLED C/W DRILLINGS FREE THERMAL EXPANSION JACKET DRILLING PASSES CLOSE TO LINER SURFACE LEAK OFF LINE / TELL TALE HOLE EXHAUST PORTS SCAVENGE PORTS LEAK OFF LINE / TELL TALE HOLE SECOND ADDITIONAL CYLINDER OIL SUPPLY C/W INLET RUBBER RINGS LEAK OFF LINE / TELL TALE HOLE PLUG BORE COOLING VIEW Stresses on liners • Mechanical stress – pressure • Thermal stress - temperature Mechanical stress • In supercharged engines, maximum firing pressure is about 90 – 100 Bar (non supercharged is about 75-85 Bar). • This pressure produces circumferential (hoop) stress and longitudinal stress, but hoop stress is twice longitudinal stress so only hoop stress is considered where: CYLINDER HEAD • HOOP STRESS, h =PxD 2t DUE WHERE, P = GAS PRESSURE CRACK TO HOOP STRESS D = LINER DIAMETER t = LINER THICKNESS • Thus hoop stress will increase if bore size and firing pressure increase THERMAL STRESS • Resistance to heat flow through liner metal produces a temperature gradient across liner hence, the inner wall expands more relative to outer wall, where: thermal stress, T = T where T is temperature gradient Liner-Stresses • Thicker liner will increase temperature gradient hence thermal stress but on the other hand, thicker liner have good resistance to mechanical stress. Thus, liner design becomes complex , • Also, inner liner surface temperature should be sufficiently low to retain oil film and high enough to avoid acid-dew (sulphur) Estimated temperature in liner - Next to liner wall 500oC - On liner wall 140oC due to oil film, carbon deposits and stagnant - Outer liner wall 75oC due to thickness of liner wall and cooling water - Lower part 40oC due to expansion Cylinder cover 1650 oC 500 oC Cylinder jacket 140 oC Piston 75 oC Cooling water space Cylinder liner 40 oC Combination of stresses (plain liner) THERMAL STRESS OPTIMUM METAL THICKNESS HOOP or MECHANICAL STRESS METAL THICKNESS Liner-temperatures • The Liner will get tend to get very hot during engine operation as the heat energy from the burning fuel is transferred to the cylinder wall. So that the temperature can be kept within acceptable limits the liner is cooled. Liner-Temperatures & Cooling • Cylinder liners from older lower powered engines had a uniform wall thickness and the cooling was achieved by circulating cooling water through a space formed between liner and jacket. The cooling water space was sealed from the scavenge space using 'O' rings and a telltale passage between the 'O' rings led to the outside of the cylinder block to show a leakage. • To increase the power of the engine for a given number of cylinders, either the efficiency of the engine must be increased or more fuel must be burnt per cycle. To burn more fuel, the volume of the combustion space must be increased, and the mass of air for combustion must be increased. Because of the resulting higher pressures in the cylinder from the combustion of this greater mass of fuel, and the larger diameters, the liner must be made thicker at the top to accommodate the higher hoop stresses, and prevent cracking of the material. Liner-Temperatures • If the thickness of the material is increased, then it stands to reason that the working surface of the liner is going to increase in temperature because the cooling water is now further away. Increased surface temperature means that the material strength is reduced, and the oil film burnt away, resulting in excessive wear and increased thermal stressing. Liner-Temperatures • The solution is to bring the cooling water closer to the liner wall, and one method of doing this without compromising the strength of the liner is to use tangential bore cooling. TANGENTIAL BORE COOLING TANGENTIAL BORE COOLING • Holes are bored from the underside of the flange formed by the increase in liner diameter. The holes are bored upwards and at an angle so that they approach the internal surface of the liner at a tangent. Holes are then bored radially around the top of the liner so that they join with the tangentially bored holes. Liner-Bore Cooling • On some large bore, long stroke engines it was found that the undercooling further down the liner was taking place. Why is this a problem? Well, the hydrogen in the fuel combines with the oxygen and burns to form water. Normally this is in the form of steam, but if it is cooled it will condense on the liner surface and wash away the lube oil film. Fuels also contain sulphur. Liner-Cooling • This burns in the oxygen and the products combine with the water to form sulphuric acid. If this condenses on the liner surface (below 140º) then corrosion can take place. • Once the oil film has been destroyed then wear will take place at an alarming rate. One solution was to insulate the outside of the liner so that there was a reduction in the cooling effect. On The latest engines the liner is only cooled at the very top. Cylinder liner-Loads • The inside surface is subjected to the rubbing action of the piston rings as the piston is moving reciprocate in the bore of liner. • Subjected to a very high combustion pressure and temperature, particularly at upper end. • Takes the side thrust of the piston caused by the connecting rod acting at an angle Liner-Lubrication • The oil is of a high alkalinity which combats the acid attack from the sulphur in the fuel. The latest engines time the injection of oil using a computer which has inputs from the crankshaft position, engine load and engine speed. The correct quantity of oil can be injected by opening valves from a pressurized system, just as the piston ring pack is passing the injection point. 4 stroke Cylinder Liner • The cylinder liner is cast separately from the main cylinder frame for the same reasons as given for the 2 stroke engine which are: • Modern liners employ bore cooling at the top of the liner where the pressure stress is high and therefore the liner wall thickness has to be increased. This brings the cooling water close to the liner surface to keep the liner wall temperature within acceptable limits so that there is not a breakdown in lubrication or excessive thermal stressing. • Although the liner is splash lubricated from the revolving crankshaft, cylinder lubricators may be provided on the larger engines. 4S Liners • On the example shown, the lubricator drillings are bored from the bottom of the liner circumferentially around the liner wall. Another set of holes are drilled to meet up with these vertically bored holes at the point where the oil is required at the liner surface. Other engines may utilise axial drillings as in a two stroke engine. Sulzer ZA40 Liner (vee engine; The straight engine is similar) Cylinder Liners-Cooling Water • Where the cooling water space is formed between the engine frame and the jacket, there is a danger that water could leak down and contaminate the crankcase if the sealing O rings were to fail. As a warning, "tell tale" holes are led from between the O rings to the outside of the engine. MAN-B&W L58/64 Liner Cylinder Liners-Cooling Water • Modern engines tend not to use this space for cooling water. Instead a separate water jacket is mounted above the cylinder frame. This stops any risk of leakage of water from the cooling space into the crankcase (or oil into the cooling water space), and provides the cooling at the hottest part of the cylinder liner. Cylinder Liner-AP Ring • Note that the liner opposite is fitted with a fireband. This is sometimes known as an antipolishing ring. • It is slightly smaller in diameter than the liner, and its purpose is to remove the carbon which builds up on the piston above the top ring. If this carbon is allowed to build up it will eventually rub against the liner wall, polishing it and destroying its oil retention properties. Liner-Materials • Cast iron is used for the following reason: - Castibility is good for intricate shapes - Good wear resistance due to large surface of irregular shaped graphite flakes and semiporous surface to retain oil - Good thermal conductivity - Good internal damping properties (vibration) - Cost less relatively MATERIAL • Nodular or spheroidal cast iron is used for the following reason: - tougher - More resistance to crack formation (less stress raising matrix) - Less self lubrication properties * For higher power, shock loading due to combustion pressure MATERIAL • Alloy element - Specify alloying elements namely nickel, chromium, copper or molybdenum – wear resistance to corrosion MATERIAL • For large bore cylinder liners generally the cast iron contains: Carbon - 3.00% Silicon 0.70% Manganese - 1.00% Sulphur 0.10% Phosphorus - 0.25% Vanadium 0.15% Manufacture • Two methods - Sand casting - Centrifugal casting Liners-Manufacture • After casting, liners are rough- machined and hydraulically pressure tested approximately 7 Bar • Ports are formed in casting (old practice),however nowadays they are marked, drilled shaped and machined finish • Then outside and inside surface is finalmachined, sometime inside surface is honed to improved surface finish approximately (3.5m) or surface treatment is given Surface finish treatment • Normally used an electrolytic deposition of hard chrome sometime nickel • Chrome layer is approximately 0.2 to 1.0 mm • Chrome surface must be porous for oil retention and this can be achieved by etching with acid or a patented “porus-krome” Advantages: • Hard surface and improve wearresistance, corrosion resistance, uniform surface finish Disadvantages • Expansive since reduction in wear rate cannot offset cost, plating can peel-off, must use only with cast iron piston rings, running in action may be delayed ,leading to rings collapse or scoring of liner Sand casting • Better wearing properties due to better grain flow produced in cast material • Better graphitisation, thus lubricating properties, due to slow cooling rate • Normally used for large, slow speed engines Centrifugal casting • • • • Stronger liner Homogeneous in structure Poor wearing quality (fast cooling rate) Normally used for medium and high speed engine Porosity manufactured • The plated cylinder liner is immersed into a special bath and the current (for electroplating) is reversed. This forms minute pits and channels in the chromium plating • After plating, liner is ground or honed. Then it is replaced in the bath together with a screen attached to its surface. The current is then reversed and smallhemispherical cavities are produced Liner fault - crack 1 Crack across liner flange due to uneven or excessive 2 3 4 5 6 tightening of cylinder head studs Hoop stress crack due to poor liner support Circumferential crack along wear ridge due to stress concentration or more likely new rings hitting the ridge Star or crazy cracking caused by flame impingement Star cracks around lubricator quill due to water leakage Cracks across port bars due to overloading, poor cooling, scavenge fire, poor fitting of rubbing sealing ring etc 4 1 3 2 5 6 Cylinder liner wear There are three main cause of damage to the liner material; • Abrasion-caused by solid particles breaking through the lubricant film • Corrosion-caused by the acidic products of combustion • Friction or scuffing-Break down of the lubricating oil film leading to metal to metal contact Abrasion • Hard particles combined with cylinder lubricant to form a light abrasive paste causing liner wear • In crosshead engine, cylinder lubricant is limited and thus flushing of abrasive paste is not effective compared to trunk engine having a good flushing action. Thus in crosshead engine, abrasive wear is the major contributor for liner wear. Liner Wear • Source of hard particles can originate from - Air borne dirt, - Ash in fuel, - Carbon from combustion - Piston rings wear Air borne dirt • Dirty air filter • Dirty scavenge ports which is should be keep degree of dirtiness to minimum • Scavenge manifold dirt Ash in fuel • Fuel consists of vanadium, sodium silica and scale (iron rust) which cannot be avoided, however it can be reduced by effective centrifugal separation Carbon from combustion • Combustion can never be perfect to form a hard carbon particles • Means that if bad combustion occurs, more carbon will be produced even abrasive matter • Therefore keep purification and combustion good apart from injection and pump timing even fuel temperature to be maintained. Piston rings wear • Produces wear dust from rubbing and this increases wear of both liner and rings itself • Therefore should used good quality ring material and lubrication apart from good fitting Corrosion • Marine fuel contain sulphur to form sulphur dioxide and sulphur trioxide when the fuel burns as shown: SO2 + H2O --------- SULPHUROUS ACID SO3 + H2O --------- SULPHURIC ACID UNBURNED FUEL (SULPHUR) + UNPERFECT COMBUSTION (O2 + H2O) -------- SULPHURIC ACID RELATION BETWEEN H2SO4 DEWPOINT TEMPERATURE & FUEL SULPHUR CONTENT AT DIFFERENT PRESSURES H2SO4 dewpoint temperature oC) 180 40 160 150 140 1 130 120 110 1.0 2.0 Sulphur in fuel %wt 3.0. Pressure (bar) 80 170 Liner wear • The dew point of the above acid is around 110oC to 180oC depending upon concentration, hence acid is always present due to liner temperature around that boundary • Thus to combat or reduces this type of wear, the following should be made: Remedies of corrosion • Used alkaline oil for cylinder lubrication • Control condensation in air cooler • Keep cooling water temperature in jacket as high as practicable • Keep quantity of starting air minimum Note: to protect waste heat system from corrosion, by pass such system when engine is on light load Scuffing or friction • This is occur when lubricant failed to separate rings and liner surfaces efficiently and subsequent contact caused microwelding or microseizure. • Reasons why these can occur on the liner surfaces: Liner Wear-Scuffing • Too smooth liner surface resulting in too little lube oil retention • Water on the liner surface repelling oil film • Blow past and thus removing oil film • Poor or inadequate oil distribution around the liner surfaces • Deposit on the piston absorbed oil film Liner wear pattern • Maximum normal liner wear occurs at top of the liner, in port-starboard direction and around scavenge and exhaust ports • The reason for the above matter are as follow; – High temperature region reduces oil viscosity and thus oil thickness – High gas pressure increases ring loading causing penetration of oil film – Slow movement of piston results in ‘oil wedge’ to breakedown (reversal of piston movement) – Movement of ship maximum in port- starboard direction than forward-aft direction (thus causing more wear here) – High temperature makes oil film less resistance to acid penetration (acid more active when hot) – Tiny particles of carbonaceous matter are formed by combustion process, some are abrasive, but some accumulates in grooves around ring leading to wear promoting condition – At higher temperature, cast iron has less resistance to wear – At scavenge and exhaust ports bars, oil film will be blown-off when topmost ring opens to the ports – Also due to the ports opening, relative pressure on ports bars increased resulting in increase wear another form of liner wear pattern is called cloverleafing CLOVERLEAFING • Alkali in cylinder oil is used to neutralize acid. • For fuel with 4-5% sulphur -cylinder oil with TBN (Total Base Number) of 70 • For fuel with 1% sulphur, used cylinder oil TBN of 20 or 30 • To obtained perfect distribution of cylinder oil is difficult so the surfaces get either more alkalinity or less depending on the position from cylinder lubrications quill and the TBN used CLOVERLEAFING Lube oil Lube oil Wear due to exhausted alkalinity before cylinder oil spreads across liner surfaces Lube oil Wear due to excessive alkalinity in cylinder oil Measured by profilograph Lube oil an instrument Liner wear-TBN • If TBN use is more, surfaces near quills will get excessive alkalinity leading to hard calcium compounds formed. • Alkaline compounds are burnt and formed heavy deposits which caused abrasive wear. • Surfaces further from quills will have alkali neutralized by then and thus minimum wear is experienced Liner Wear-TBN • If TBN used is less, surfaces near quills will have minimum wear but surfaces furthest from quills will be starved of alkaline compounds when reaches there. • This will lead to acidic corrosion (since insufficient alkalis to neutralize acid) and thus experienced maximum wear. • If insufficient oil used, the effect will be exchanged (TBN) MICROSEIZURE – OIL FILM LINER WALL LINER WALL LINER WALL RING RING RING Asperities meet Frictional heat and welding Tearing out, cooling, hardening OIL - WEDGE OIL FILM LINER WALL PISTON SKIRT PISTON SKIRT LINER WALL OIL – WEDGE OIL FILM (1:150 TAPPER) WEAR RATE TEMPLETE Cyl No Date Date fitted Date of last gauging C Total hours Hours since last gauging D Position A B LINER Forward and After TOP RING POSITION Port and Starboard A WEAR B E C D E F EXHAUST PORT F G H SCAVENGE PORT Max wear G Mean Max Wear Wear rate since new Wear rate since last gauging Remarks H LINER WEAR RECORD SHEET RESULTS Liner wear-Analysis • Wear rates vary, but as a general rule, for a large bore engine a wear rate of 0.05 0.1mm/1000 hours is acceptable. The liner should be replaced as the wear approaches 0.8 - 1% of liner diameter. The liner is gauged at regular intervals to ascertain the wear rate. • It has been known for ships to go for scrap after 20 + years of operation with some of the original liners in the engine. • The wear rate for a medium speed liner should be below 0.015mm/1000hrs. Gauging a Liner Wear rate • It is related to time in order to put these figures into useful form of comparison, in the form of diameter increase per thousand running hours. Thus :• Wear rate since last recorded measurement = Increase in O since last recordX 1000 Running horus since last record = mm/1000 hrs Liner Wear-Analysis • Wear rate since new : Total increase in O = X 1000 Total running hours since new = mm/1000 hrs Maxi. Liner wear rate mm/1000 MAXIMUM CYLINDER LINER WEAR RATE PER RUNNING HOURS 0.4 0.3 WEAR RATE INCREASES DUE TO WORN RINGS AND LINERS 0.2 GRAUDALWEAR STARTS 0.1 RUNNING-IN PERIOD 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 ENGINE RUNNING HOURS x 1000 16 18 20 Causes of excessive wear • Improper running in – smoothing and geometry • Misalignment of piston or distortion of cylinder – thermal stress and uneven tightening • Inadequate oil supply or unsatisfactory oil supply • Lube oil too low in viscosity or too low in alkalinity • Incorrect piston ring clearances • Unstable cylinder liner material – phosphorous / silicon • Contamination of lube oil by extraneous abrasive material – 4stroke engine • Cylinder wall temperature too high or too low – oil film breakdown or corrosive wear • Overloading of engine – overheated,distorted and lube oil destroyed • Scavenge air temperature too low – wash oil film, form acid, rusting • Inefficient combustion – carbon • Use of low sulphur fuel (less than 1% sulphur) in conjuntion with high alkaline cylinder oil and vise versa DETAIL of SEALING RINGS • Depth of groove = 0.7 to 0.8d where “d” is diameter of rings section. This is because the sealing effect is best when ring is in deformed state. • Rubber ring cross-sectional area is 75 to 90% of grooves area. (due to rubber being flexible but incompressible) • Di (inside Ø of rubber rings) is 2% less than DG (diameter of the bottom of groove) – for prestressing effect when fitted in liner. • Sealing parts smooth and guiding edges tapered and rounded. Rubber rings and sealing parts applied with tallow or soft soap. DG Di = 0.98 DG Di 0.7 to 0.8d d Cylinder liner lubrication Cylinder lubrication •Because the cylinder is separate from the crankcase there is no splash lubrication as on a trunk piston engine. Oil is supplied through drillings in the liner. Grooves machined in the liner from the injection points spread the oil circumferentially around the liner and the piston rings assist in spreading the oil up and down the length of the liner. DISTRIBUTOR REGULATING VALVE CYLINDER OIL PUMP CYLINDER OIL SUPPLY DISTRIBUTOR LUBRICATOR QUILLS PURPOSE CYLINDER LUBRICATION • Reduce friction between liner and ring – scuffing • Assist in sealing of combustion gas – blowpast,burnt oil film etc • Insulate liner against high gas temperature – viscosity and fluidity • Guard against corrosive attack – as above • Neutralizing combustion acid – TBN and rate of reaction • Removing carbon or oxidation deposits – in ring zones and ports DOXFORD ‘J’ CYL LUB. SYSTEM LUBRICATOR QUILL OR INJECTOR CYLINDER LINER HYDRAULIC PLUNGER ROTATING RATCHET TO CYLINDER LUBRICATOR QUILLS DISCHARGE FLOW INDICATOR AND ALARM OIL PULSE TO OPERATE RATCHET MECHANISM SUCTION FLOW INDICATOR ROTATING DISTRIBUTOR FROM TANK FILTER CAMSHAFT SPRING RETURN PLUNGER WITH SPILL PORT FORK LEVER INJECTOR BARREL WITH HELICAL SLOT ROLLER ACTUATOR BARREL WITH PORTS TO LUBRICATOR QUILL NON-RETURN VALVE TYPICAL LUBRICATOR BUBLER GAUGE WIRE NUT FILLING FILTER SIGHT GLASS FILLED WITH FLUID AIR VENT SCREW NUT QUANTITY REGULATES DUAL DELIVERY VALVE DIFFERENT PUMP LUNGER MOVING PLUNGER WITHOUT CAMSHAFT TURNING GAUGE GLASS CAM (POSITION ADJUSTABLE) CAMSHAFT OIL IN FLUSHING TRIGGER DUAL SUCTION VALVE JOINT PACKING NON-RETURN VALVE OIL INLET CYLINDER JACKET FILLING PIN GROUN FACE JOINT OR COPPER GASKET COOLING WATER SPACE COOLING WATER SPACE CYLINDER LINER RUBBER PACKING TYPICAL QUILL FOR LUBRICATOR (OLD TYPE) SULZER RND - M CYLINDER LUBRICATION (ACCUMULATOR SYSTEM NON-RETURN VALVE CYLINDER LINER LUBRICATOR QUILL ACCUMULATOR FLOW CONTROLLER OIL QUANTITY ADJUSTING LEVER AUTOMATIC LOAD DEPENDENT FEED RATE REGULATION ECENTRIC EXCENTRE DRIVE CAMSHAFT CYLINDER LUBRICATING PUMP JOINT PACKING NON-RETURN VALVE ACCUMULATOR PISTON & DIAPHRAGM CYLINDER JACKET UPWARD SLANTING BORE SLEEVE ACCUMULATOR PISTON & RINGS OIL INLET FILLING PIN COOLING WATER SPACE GROUND FACE JOINT CYLINDER LINER SEALING RING NEW TYPE SULZER RND-M LUBRICATOR QUILL ACCUMULATOR operation • Through pipe oil is supplied by the cylinder lubricating pump (at about every 10 – 15 engine turns)into space under piston and diaphragm. • The accumulator piston which is sealed off by a diaphragm is against the force of the spring pushed upwards. • Through this a pressure builds up in the system which is higher than the scavenge air pressure of the engine • If the pressure at the delivery point drops below the accumulating pressure, the oil will then flow through the upward slanting bore into the cylinder. • As soon as the pressure at the lubricating point on the cylinder higher than the accumulating pressure, the lubrication is stopped (non- return valve closes) • At which moment, in relation to the piston position respectively the pressure ratio, the lubrication is carried out as shown in schematic illustration below:- QUILL PRESSURE FLUCTUATION 1 2 3 4 CYLINDER LINER PISTON LUBRICATING QUILL PRESSURE (BAR) 40 30 4 20 COMPRESSION EXPANSION 1 10 Oil pressure in accumulator 6 0 BDC 90o 2 3 TDC CRANK ANGLE 5 270o BDC • In the range of BDC, between the position 5 + 6 and in the range of TDC, between the position 2 + 3 the pressure in the accumulator is higher than the pressure at the lubricating point. Consequently the oil flows in the said range to the cylinder liner running surface. • So the running surface is lubricated twice per one engine turn. • Between positions 6 + 2 as well as 3 + 5 the pressure is higher at the lubricating point than in the lubricating quill. The oil supply to the cylinder liner is stopped (non –return valve closes) • Cylinder oil feed rates – Uniflow scavenge – Loop / Cross scavenge – Trunk engine - 0.54g/kWh 0.8 - 0.9g/kWh 1.0 - 1.6 g/kWh POSITION OF CYLINDER LUBRICATORS • Not to be near the ports – oil can be scraped and blown away • Not to be situated too near the high temperature zone or the oil will burn easily • There should be sufficient points to ensure as even and as complete a coverage as possible • Oil is injected between 1st and 2nd rings at the outer end of stroke (upper piston) also oil is injected between 1st and 2nd rings during early part of compression stroke (lower piston) MULTILEVEL LUBRICATION SULZER RTA 52/62/72/76/84/84M Oil refreshing rate near TDC A B C C B+C A B A B+C Multilevel lubrication V ring Hmin Oil film thickness C Hmin Difficulty on achieving • Piston direction changes every stroke • In 2-stroke engine, no non-working stroke available for oil film to reform • In diaphragm engine, no oil is returned, therefore supply is limited to control consumption and no cooling effect. • Piston and ring distorted due to gas pressure and temperature • All fuel contain abrasive contaminants • Liner temperature varies causing change in viscosity Difficulty in Timing • Piston speed may be high (approximately 2o of crank angle only)slow movement will destroy oil wedge • Only very small quantity of oil being pumped • Gas pressure resists delivery charge • Cylinder oil viscosity changes due to temperature even will impede (prevent) oil formation • A long, small bore pipe is needed to connect pump and quill(delivery lag) • Carbon deposit may foul the quill • A non-return valve is needed in quill which may become sluggish • Delay between pumping and delivery may represent up to 30o of crank movement • Oil groove in liner may be filled with carbon deposits Gauging a cylinder liner Liner Gauging • Gauging a liner is carried out for two reasons: To establish the wear rate of the liner, and to predict if and when the liner will require changing. • Although on a 2 stroke engine the condition of the liner can be established by inspection through the scavenge ports (evidence of blowby, scuffing etc.), the liner is gauged during the routine unit overhaul (15000 hrs), or if the unit has to be opened up for any reason Source: www.marinediesels.info Liner Gauging • Because of the action of the piston rings, the varying gas pressure and temperature in the cylinder, the wear will not be even down the length of the liner. Consider the piston just beginning the power stroke. The gas pressure pushing the piston rings against the liner wall is at its highest; The liner surface temperature up at this part of the liner is about 200°C, so the viscosity of the lubricating oil is low. The relative speed of the piston is low, and so the lubrication is only boundary. Liner Gauging • Because of these factors wear at the top of a liner increases to a maximum a few centimetres below the position of the top ring at TDC, and then decreases as the ring pressure and liner wall temperature decreases and the piston speed increases building up a hydrodynamic film between liner and ring surfaces. Then as the piston slows down and the rings pass over the port bars, the wear will increase due to boundary lubrication, a reduction in surface area, and oil being blown out into the scavenge space. Liner Gauging • A liner is gauged by measuring the diameter of the liner at fixed points down its length. It is measured from port to stbd (athwartships) and fwd to aft. An internal micrometer is used because of its accuracy (within 0.01mm). To ensure that the liner is always measured in the same place, so that accurate comparisons may be made, a flat bar is hung down the side of the liner with holes drilled through where the measurements are to be taken. Gauging a liner on a large bore RTA engine. Source: www.marinediesels.info Liner Gauging • Measurements are taken at more frequent intervals at the top of the liner where wear rate is expected to be highest. • To ensure accuracy, the micrometer gauge is checked against a standard, and the liner and micrometer should be at ambient temperature. If the temperature is higher then a correction factor can be applied. To ensure micrometer and liner are at the same temperature, lay the micrometer on the entablature for a few minutes before starting. Liner Gauging • The readings can be recorded in tabular form, and from the data obtained the wear rate/1000 hours can be calculated. Wear rate varies, but on a large 2 stroke crosshead engine ideally should be about 0.05mm/1000 hours. On a medium speed trunk piston engine where the procedure for gauging is similar, the wear rate is around 0.015mm/1000 hours. Cylinder Number: 1 Nominal Dia: 840mm Total Running hours: 60000 Running hours since last calibration: 15000 Gauging point P-S F-A Wear rate (average) P-S Wear rate (average) F-A last calib. P-S wear rate P-S last calib. F-A wear rate F-A 1 841.2 841.26 0.02 0.021 840.95 0.017 841 0.017 2 841.38 841.44 0.023 0.024 841.1 0.019 841.17 0.018 Etc Figures are for illustration only. Manufacturers quote max wear for a cylinder liner at about 0.8% of original diameter. If the wear rate is kept to a minimum, then the liner may last the life of the engine. Replacing cylinder liner Diesel Engine The photograph above shows clearly the evidence of the leaking liner. The cooling water has evaporated leaving white deposits of the cooling water treatment chemical • The oil mist detector had activated during a day at sea and the engine had shut down automatically due to high oil mist content in the crankcase. After a period of about 30 minutes the crankcase doors were removed and the crankcase partitions inspected. The reason for the activation was not an overheated bearing, but water vapour due to the failure of a cylinder liner lower “O” ring seal on one cylinder that was allowing cooling water from the jacket cooling space into the crankcase. This meant that the whole running gear for that cylinder was required to be removed for replacement of the liner. Liner Replacement • The engine was isolated from main cooling water systems and drained, the compressed air system was isolated, the pre-lubrication pump was stopped, and the turning gear engaged. The expansion tank levels were monitored during maintenance in case a valve was passing on the engine, and the engine refilling with water. The drain for the engine was kept open and monitored closely for signs of leakage. Liner Replacement • The cylinder head and the piston were removed. The cylinder lubrication pipes at the bottom of the cylinder liner were disconnected by undoing and removing the banjo bolts. The bolt securing the centering piece which locates the liner in the correct position in the cylinder bore is removed. Liner Replacement • The liner must be jacked off its seating using a hydraulic jack. In the case of the ZA40 the jacking device is bolted to the crankpin bearing. (Left in place when removing the con rod, which is normally bolted to the bearing by means of a marine palm After attaching the jacking device to the bottom end bearing the bearing was turned through 90° and the crankpin turned to TDC. The hydraulic pump connected to the jacks was operated so that the jack locates in the bottom of the liner. The liner was then jacked upwards until the liner moved off its seat. (the jack has only a 54mm lift). The liner lifting tool was then bolted on to the top of the cylinder liner and hooked up to the engine room crane. The liner was then carefully removed from the engine (mass of liner 450kg). Liner Replacement The new assemblies were inspected prior to fitting. While the liner was removed from the engine, the jacket cooling space around the liner was inspected for overall condition that can indicate the effectiveness of the cooling water treatment. The guiding bores in the entablature and O ring seating were cleaned and examined for evidence of corrosion /erosion and the landing face for the cylinder liner was cleaned and examined. Fig: View looking down through engine frame with cylinder liner removed. Note: Although this is a ZA40 engine it is not the one being described. This is a Vee engine: You can see the side by side bottom end arrangement. The new liner was cleaned, inspected and gauged to ensure it was within limits specified by Wartsila. Landing and sealing faces were inspected to ensure they were free from damage. Lubrication drillings were blown through with compressed air to ensure they were clear. The lifting gear was attached and the liner tried in the entablature without O rings to ensure that it fitted without binding. Liner Replacement The liner was withdrawn and heat resistant Viton O rings fitted which were well lubricated with engine oil. The landing face was smeared with a sealing compound. The liner was fitted into the engine ensuring that the centering piece was correctly lined up. Once the liner was in position the centering piece location bolt was fitted and the cylinder lubricators connected and checked by operating the pumps by hand and ensuring that oil issued from the lubrication points. The Liner was gauged and the readings recorded. The running gear was reassembled, fitting new piston rings. Once the cylinder running gear was all in place, the engine was refilled with water, and the crankcase checked to ensure no leakage was occurring. The engine was then prepared for running. All equipment used was accounted for and the crankcase was checked clear of tools, rags and personnel. The cylinder lubricators were wound 15 times to ensure lubrication of the piston and liners, and the engine was turned a minimum of 2 revolutions with the turning gear to check for correct operation of the running gear, the running gear is observed through the crankcase doors and the rocker cover. The ammeter on the turning gear panel is monitored so that if a partial seizure was to occur, the current drawn by the motor would have increased, indicating a problem. The engine crankcase was monitored for water leakage from the liners during the warming through procedure. The lubricating oil, which had been circulating through the purifier was checked for water content, and the oil pumps switched on and oil flow through the bearings checked. Once the engine was ready for starting the normal routine for checking the engine was followed: - After a very short run (30 seconds) the engine was stopped and the bottom end bearing on the overhauled unit checked. - The engine was then run for increasing intervals of time; 2, 10, 30 minutes, checking the bearing in between. Finally the load on the engine was slowly increased and the unit run in as per manufacturers instructions; reduced load and increased cylinder lubrication whilst the rings bedded into the liner. References: 1. www.marinediesels.info 2. The Running and Maintenance of Marine Machinery – Cowley 3. Reeds Marine Engineering Series, Vol. 12 – Motor Engineering Knowledge for Marine Engineers 4. Lamb’s Question and Answers on Marine Diesel Engines – S. Christensen 5. Principles and Practice of Marine Diesel Engines – Sanyal 6. www.dieselduck.info (Martin’s Marine Engineering Page)