I am impressed how politely answered this question was. It is very very impractical if not totally impossible to convert economically from gasoline to diesel fuel. Like someone said if you have an unlimited budget…have at it
Enjoyed your response.I am a diesel lover stuck in an anti-diesel country....LOL. My boat has a wonderful 54hp Yanmar (that uses 5 quarts of oil, BTW). I had two diesel VW wagons -- yes, they had a turbo, but WOW would they accelerate! My top MPG trip was 50MPG over a 200mile trip. Yes, really! To be fair, I was "trying" and so did the entire trip at the posted speed limit -- doing the normal 10-15 MPH over the speed limit kills fuel economy.
I do find it interesting that the US is considered an environmentally irresponsible country, with Europe much more progressive. But, diesel is ubiquitous in Europe, and can't get through the US environmental regulations (putting aside issues like cost and customer preference). It's always struck me as an odd situation.
FYI - From my limited understanding. There have been two main types of diesel cylinder heads;Simple answer is no.
The compression is too high for a standard gas engine to be converted to diesel then there is the following.
You will need a custom cylinder head with precombustion chamber, glow plugs, fuel injectors with heat shields and an injection pump that is able to properly supply adequate high fuel pressure to the injector of several thousand psi and then time it all to work with either gear drive to the crank or roller chain.
Diesel engines do not use carburetors they use a high pressure injection pump, the good diesels like cummins use mechanical pumps.
Then the internals, beefed up crank shaft, bearings, rods, piston and rings.
Look back to GM's flop of the early diesel conversions, bent connecting rods, broken rings, blown head gaskets. Not that the duratrash from Isuzu is much better.
But you took the topic away from where the question was asked and took it into tractor trailers, and automobile engines of the diesel variety.Had a W123 240D, 3 x W123 300D's and a W116 240D - LOOOVE diesel.
While the naturally aspirated variants are very sloooow to accelerate - man do they just keep going! 160 kph, noooo problemo! and as solid on the road at that speed, as they are at 60 kph. One of my 300Ds was a station wagon 5 speed factory manual. Fully laden (adults & gear for a weak on the road), high speed cruising, 7 L/100 kilometres ( 33 miles /gal?) - this in a 1985 built vehicle!!!!
In short you don't actually know what you are talking about
- Your generalisations on oil capacity/filters is BS.
- Your statement on turbo charging is also BS - while a turbo will generally improve a diesels performance (just like a petrol) is not actually required.
- Diesel engines, of the same swept capacity, will in general outperform & use less fuel than a petrol when it comes to work (torque) - not many petrol trucks & tractors around these days.
- Car (petrol) drivers do not, in general, like the lower acceleration of diesels, the smell of the fuel & exhaust and the usually higher purchase price.
- Diesel engines will usually outlast their petrol equivalent - the exception being where the manufacture tries to achieve petrol type exceleration/weight /cost. These engines have a troubled history & are most often rubbish. Dont purchase a diesel if you \want to get burning rubber at the traffic lights.
- For a diesel powered vehicle variant to be cost effective, you must be doing high mileage or towing/carrying (working)
- Industrial equipment (large mowers, etc) are usually diesel due to the better torque characteristics of the engine & the lower fuel consumption.
- In service time, injectors/turbos will wear out, no matter petrol or diesel.
- What the uneducated /fashion/market driven public do/purchase is little indication of any products actual worth.
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I think you may be a little confused.Don't think it is possible. Not enough compression, the block is not strong enough to handle the compression increase, the rods are too weak, no way to put injectors in the head.
As for a turbo many farm tractors have not used a turbo the AC D19 was the first, then other manufacturers started using them. There was a company M&W that made kits to put them on nonturbo engines. Some successful and some not. If memory is right the 4320 was JD first attempt. Many early farm tractors were not turboed and ran and worked just fine. That said some farmers installed turbos and turned down the fuel to get original HP they did it for better fuek efficency.
If you wanted to try anything it would be easier to convert it to ALL FUEL. These used "tractor fuel often refered to as distolate" You need two fuel tanks a small tank for gasoline for starting and a large tank for fuel. Start on gas warm up switch to fuel, to shut off switch back to gas so it will start next time. The problem with tractor fuel is there is a substantial power loss.
Forgot Briggs did has a three cylinder diesel made by Dihatsu and Toyota They have been out of production for many years because of many issues.
I am not sure what you mean by this.The problem with tractor fuel is there is a substantial power loss.
Propane has significantly lower energy/L than either petrol or diesel. The effect is lower power, more gas consumed /hr/kilometer than a liquid fuel.Screw Diesel. Go with Propane. Plugs will last 4ever and you'll have to stick to strict runtime oil changes because oil always looks new as the day you changed it. Conversion kits are out there and reasonably priced.
I am a fan of propane as autogas fuel. Curious about your oil change interval statement, if it comes out looking clean and not smelling burnt (assumption). How are you know the oil needs changed at same intervals? Is there any data from oil sample tests (Blackstone Labs, or similar) that prove out the same oil change interval is true for gasoline and propane fuels? I am of the understanding propane burns cleaner, I would think that the oil would contaminate more slowly. Does the oil just wear out at a certain rate with no other factors?Screw Diesel. Go with Propane. Plugs will last 4ever and you'll have to stick to strict runtime oil changes because oil always looks new as the day you changed it. Conversion kits are out there and reasonably priced.