I am having a very difficult time understanding why exactly diesel motors (generally) don't produce a vacuum like a gasoline engine does. Since both are operating on the 4 stroke principle, I don't see how the movement of a piston downward in a cylinder in a diesel motor isn't drawing in air, thus creating a vacuum.
I have scoured Google and here is what I have read so far:
1. Diesel engines use fuel injection to control the throttle, and this is also why they don't have a throttle
2. In a way, a diesel engine runs constantly at wide-open-throttle.
Where I'm perplexed is how a diesel engine isn't constantly at max RPM if it runs in the manner described above.
I have scoured Google and here is what I have read so far:
1. Diesel engines use fuel injection to control the throttle, and this is also why they don't have a throttle
2. In a way, a diesel engine runs constantly at wide-open-throttle.
Where I'm perplexed is how a diesel engine isn't constantly at max RPM if it runs in the manner described above.