You could regulate the pressure, though I would think that the higher the pressure, the better the atomization. Hence why disels use such high pressures.barts wrote:Well, the compressor would suck a lot of power, so I'll skip that... we don't need thousands of psi for direct oil spraying; a few hundred is more than enough from what I got talking to the guys on the Jeremiah O'Brien. The nozzle is tricky, and requires close tolerances to get a nice spray pattern; if one uses waste oil they get beat up more quickly. A steam operated pump is what most ships use for that service, but a small gear pump would work well here. Oil burner pumps work in this service.87gn@tahoe wrote:Bart,
What about a main engine-mounted compressor to air atomize waste motor oil? Or a disel injection pump for common rail disels (no pulses, just a solid flow of 1000's of psi) to pressure atomize the oil?
One of the advantages of using a steam atomizing burner is that they create a substantial draft.
=- Bart
If the waste oil is thoroughly cleaned (my centrifuge can clean it down to 2 microns or less depending on feed rate) nozzle erosion would be no more than regular disel, and probably significantly less than the bunker C that the boys on the Jeremiah would have used during WWII.
Draft would be a plus, but draft from a source that doesn't waste water or HP would be better... hint hint
Six of one, half a dozen of another