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-   -   "Sir, your check engine light is on..." (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/579349-sir-your-check-engine-light.html)

Rusty Heap 12-08-2010 06:33 PM

"Sir, your check engine light is on..."
 
Nice:


YouTube - Engine Explosion dyno room

Laneco 12-08-2010 06:36 PM

Ewww.... That was expensive. Bet it was really, really LOUD too!

angela

Hugh R 12-08-2010 06:41 PM

Wow, they should have used that BG System of engine lubes that guarantees against engine failure.

pwd72s 12-08-2010 06:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hugh R (Post 5716827)
Wow, they should have used that BG System of engine lubes that guarantees against engine failure.



LOL! Good one...

Brando 12-08-2010 07:00 PM

Built Ford Toueeeerrrrrrrr-wooops...

onewhippedpuppy 12-08-2010 07:14 PM

Motor Meister? :D

crustychief 12-08-2010 07:58 PM

runaway diesel?

azasadny 12-09-2010 03:20 AM

Ouch!

ODDJOB UNO 12-09-2010 04:48 AM

welcome to "ON-STAR", would you like a systems analysis update?

Rusty Heap 12-09-2010 08:33 AM

after watching that many many times back to back, you can see a vertical linear bearing or pneumatic cylinder in the back ground that controls a water flow valve, engine isn't under any load till half way through the dyno run.

Most likely, this is a hydrostatic dyno where you put more and more load on it via the engine turning a water pump and you can vary the load this way (did some dyno work back in College with a beater 2 barrel carb'd Chevy 350 on a waterdyno) it took 8-10 horsepower just to idle the engine, keeping the piston mass/crank/oil pump/valve train resistance all spinning.

Note 1/2 way through the video, the vertical actuator in back drops, openning the water valve, engine reacts by torque rotation to the left, raising up on the right, and then the birthing process starts.


Yeah that was an ucking fugly way to kill an engine, and a big mess to clean up too with all the oil pouring out of the front of the pan at the end.

asphaltgambler 12-09-2010 08:47 AM

For even "more better engine failures" - google -search or you tube pro stock or super stock diesel pulling tractors where they run as much as 100psi of boost or more and spin the engines three to four times the OE rev limit.

Man when those things blow - they REALLY blow

wdfifteen 12-09-2010 09:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rusty Heap (Post 5717635)
after watching that many many times back to back, you can see a vertical linear bearing or pneumatic cylinder in the back ground that controls a water flow valve, engine isn't under any load till half way through the dyno run.

Most likely, this is a hydrostatic dyno where you put more and more load on it via the engine turning a water pump and you can vary the load this way (did some dyno work back in College with a beater 2 barrel carb'd Chevy 350 on a waterdyno) it took 8-10 horsepower just to idle the engine, keeping the piston mass/crank/oil pump/valve train resistance all spinning.

Note 1/2 way through the video, the vertical actuator in back drops, openning the water valve, engine reacts by torque rotation to the left, raising up on the right, and then the birthing process starts.


Yeah that was an ucking fugly way to kill an engine, and a big mess to clean up too with all the oil pouring out of the front of the pan at the end.

Interesting observations!
I worked at a GM lab that had 6 engine cells. Had to clean up after a number of failures. The worst was a 6.2 diesel driving a 700R4 that blew so spectacularly that initially we couldn't tell whether the engine or the trans had failed first. We used eddy current dynos with an inertia wheel so if something went bang it kept turning for a while and did lots of damage. Had some good times and interesting experiences in that lab.

masraum 12-09-2010 03:42 PM

This poor thing was put out of it's misery.

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VaSteve 12-09-2010 04:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rusty Heap (Post 5717635)
after watching that many many times back to back, you can see a vertical linear bearing or pneumatic cylinder in the back ground that controls a water flow valve, engine isn't under any load till half way through the dyno run.

Most likely, this is a hydrostatic dyno where you put more and more load on it via the engine turning a water pump and you can vary the load this way (did some dyno work back in College with a beater 2 barrel carb'd Chevy 350 on a waterdyno) it took 8-10 horsepower just to idle the engine, keeping the piston mass/crank/oil pump/valve train resistance all spinning.

Note 1/2 way through the video, the vertical actuator in back drops, openning the water valve, engine reacts by torque rotation to the left, raising up on the right, and then the birthing process starts.
.


Thanks for explaining that. You hear it start working at :24 with that whine...I wondered why it did that.

sc_rufctr 12-09-2010 05:31 PM

Excellent.... I liked how the guts fell out the bottom.

Almost looked liked a gutted animal :D

sc_rufctr 12-09-2010 05:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by asphaltgambler (Post 5717666)
For even "more better engine failures" - google -search or you tube pro stock or super stock diesel pulling tractors where they run as much as 100psi of boost or more and spin the engines three to four times the OE rev limit.

Man when those things blow - they REALLY blow

This is good :D

<object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Fbe5sGGqQGY?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US"></param><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"></param><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Fbe5sGGqQGY?fs=1&amp;hl=en_US" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object>


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