RodRico
Automotive
- Apr 25, 2016
- 508
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TugboatEng said:Bullshit!
Greg Locock said:Revetec had the guts to get their engine tested by an outside company, and managed a none too shabby 38% when run lean
I went down that rabbit hole early on only to discover that the limitation is not the melting temperature (or reduced strength at temperature) of the metals but the breakdown temperature of the lubricating oil. Conventional oils are good to about 300F and mainstream synthetics are are good to around 400F (Krytox XH-1000 oil is among the best high temperature oils, but it sells for $150 per ounce. See ). Beyond breakdown temperature, the oil rapidly degrades and soon fails to lubricate properly. Thus, one can make an "adiabatic engine" that runs at very high temperatures long enough to capture some impressive efficiency numbers, but it won't run for long after the lubricating oil breaks down. There have been efforts to make engines that don't require lubricants and can thus operate at much higher temperatures, but they required extremely costly materials and didn't yield efficiency gains as high as hoped for.mc5w said:If you could find a magic material that did not need to be cooled to keep it from melting.