Most powerful diesel in the world

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Just amazing.

Like to see some video w/sound of it in operation, as well as all the "life support" equipment.

From my web wanderings, the pictures provided in the above link seem to be the few availible.
 
It saids that its assembled in Japan.. but the Safety warning signs are in Korean....Looks like an Hyundai Plant to me..

Wow the 14 cylidner version consumes 27.6 gallons a minute.
 
It is incredible. What a testament to superb engineering.

Even though I am in the "high-tech" industry, we are playing around diaper-clad in the sandbox in comparison.

And yes ... 27 gallons PER MINUTE.
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That's thirsty!
 
We had our diesel generators at work serviced today, and I was talking to the mechanic about the Sulzers.

He apparently replaced a couple of pistons on a 93,000 horsepower 12 cyl version a few weeks ago.
 
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That is amazing.

What oil and how much I wonder?

I don't know how they do it in civilian ships but when I was in the Navy ships, they purify there own oil and they do oil testing EVERYDAY. In my ship they used Chevron Oil i believe. Since the engines don't burn any oil and the engines are overhauled every 3 years. i think if i can remmeber. anybody in the navy can help me@?!?!
 
njc, we've got 4MW (5000hp) of diesel gens to provide emergency power to the power stations that I work at.

Personally, I'm responsible for 2400MW (3.2 million HP) of steam turbines.
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Efficiency is most impressive.

Also impressive is that, on many engines of this size/type (not sure about the one in the link), you can completely disable a cylinder to work on it, while the rest of the engine runs.

And the most impressive thing is...600 posts! Woo-hoo!
 
I've been involved in buying and installing some Wartsilas and other engines in this size range, and the sheer scale of the things is mind-blowing. There are some pretty big spark-ignited engines around, too.

All types of fuels - #6 (bunker) oil, diesel, natural gas. Some run on a mixture of natural gas and oil, and some are either/or.

What I find interesting is that these are all inline engines. V-types are also common, I've bought Wartsila V12's.
 
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In my ship they used Chevron Oil i believe.

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Probably, Pennzoil caused the Iowa to sludge up and they had to order a 55gal drum of Battleship-RX

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Ships based on the West Coast are lucky; they can get Chevron oil for 49 cents a quart if they watch the sales and rebates..
 
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