Hot Farm Turbo

moresmoke

Well-known Member
Location
E ND
I've been doing a little research to build a hotter
turbo'ed diesel tractor. I've found a couple of
comments to the effect of "You can't turbo a lanova
energy cell engine, it ends badly." Can any one
explain why? I'm just trying to figure out what the
potential problems are.
 
What are you working on exactly? Putting a turbo on an energy cell tractor (Moline to be specific) doesn't necessarily end badly, they're just hard to get power out of. And when you say "hot farm", what are the rules you're working with? The term "hot farm" has different meanings depending on what part of the country you're in. As we know with the energy cells, the fuel squirts across the combustion chamber first, hits the cup, and then is atomized. What I've heard is that a hot farm style turbo creates too much turbulence in the cylinder for the fuel to make that trip, causing it to not atomize properly. You need a lot of timing and high injection pressure. And in realative terms, its a slow process. Whereas direct injection atomizes the fuel on the way in. Of course, this is only what I've been told ;) ......
 
The basics of the rules are stock block, head, and pump (outside), 20% over on RPM. Looking to run 6500 and 7500lb. I haven't settled on a particular tractor yet still trying to decide on what will work best. I do like different. Needs to be diesel, I don't like carbs and plugs!
 
Take out the power cells and block the hole. Advance the timing 30-32 degrees or more and flash fire it. Got a 900 Case turbo set up like this and works great.
 
my allis d19 has a turbocharged energy cell engine and it made 130hp on a pto dyno fairly easily. the hard part is keeping the combustion in the energy cells. they like to snap crackle and pop a little bit until warmed up.
 

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