diesel$21207$ - ορισμός. Τι είναι το diesel$21207$
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Τι (ποιος) είναι diesel$21207$ - ορισμός

LOCOMOTIVE POWERED BY A DIESEL ENGINE
Diesel-electric locomotive; Diesel locomotives; Diesel-mechanical; Diesel-hydraulic; Diesel electric locomotive; Diesel-hydraulic locomotive; Diesel (rail); Diesel trains; Diesel train; Diesel Locomotives; Diesel Locomotive; Diesel-electric train; Diesel-mechanical locomotive; Diesel-pneumatic locomotive; Diesel Traction; Diesel-hydraulic transmission; 🛲; Diesel–electric locomotive; Diesel hydraulic locomotive; Diesel–hydraulic locomotive; Diesel–mechanical locomotive; Throttle notch; Diesel–electric train
  • Left corridor of power compartment of Russian locomotive [[2TE116]]U, 3 – alternator, 4 – rectifier, 6 – diesel
  • Cab of the Russian locomotive [[2TE116]]U. "11" indicates the throttle.
  • Typical main generator constant power curve at "notch 8"
  • Petrol–electric [[Weitzer railmotor]], first 1903, series 1906
  • France]], 1933/34
  • Engineer's controls in a diesel–electric locomotive cab. The lever near bottom-centre is the throttle and the lever visible at bottom left is the automatic brake valve control.
  • A [[Canadian National Railway]] train showing the placement of the headlight and ditch lights on the locomotive.
  • jackshaft]] under the cab.
  • A [[GMD GMDH-1]] diesel–hydraulic locomotive
  • DB class V 200]] diesel–hydraulic
  • Schematic diagram of a diesel–electric locomotive
  • Schematic illustration of a diesel mechanical locomotive
  • EMD 12-567B]] 12-cylinder 2-stroke diesel engine (foreground; square "hand holes"), stored pending rebuild, and missing some components, with a 16-567C or D 16-cylinder engine (background; round "hand holes").
  • GE Genesis P32AC-DM]] electro-diesel locomotive can also operate off of [[third-rail]] electrification.
  • Diesel–electric locomotive built by EMD for service in the UK and continental Europe.
  • A Henschel (Germany) diesel–hydraulic locomotive in [[Medan]], [[North Sumatra]]
  • JNR DD51]] 1 diesel-hydraulic
  • [[British Rail Class D16/1]], since 1948
  • Swiss]] and German co-production: world's first functional diesel–electric railcar 1914
  • A Mckeen railcar in Wodonga, Australia, 1911
  • coupled]] together by [[Metra]] use [[diesel–electric transmission]].
  • Class 742 and 743]] locomotive
  • Diagram of Priestman oil engine from ''The Steam engine and gas and oil engines'' (1900) by John Perry
  • Shunter of [[Nederlandse Spoorwegen]] from 1934, in modern livery
  • ALCO]].
  • Soviet Locomotive TP1
  • SŽD Eel2]]
  • box cab]] (rear), [[hood unit]] (center) and [[cab unit]] (front).
  • A [[VR Class Dv12]] diesel–hydraulic locomotive
  • Class 35 "Hymek"]]
  • Russian diesel locomotive [[TEP80]]
  • ČKD ČME3]] is one of the longest-running and most-manufactured diesel–electric locomotives ever made.

derv         
  • [[Biodiesel]] made from [[soybean oil]]
  • Large diesel fuel tanks in [[Sörnäinen]], [[Helsinki]], [[Finland]]
  • does not mix]] with water. This picture also showcases the phenomenon of [[Thin-film interference]].
LIQUID FUEL USED IN DIESEL ENGINES
Petrodiesel; Gas oil; Diesel oil; Derv; DERV; Petroleum diesel; Dinodiesel; Disel fuel; Regular diesel; Fossil diesel; D2 Diesel; Synthetic diesel; Gazole (fuel); J-2 Diesel fuel; Vacuum gas oil
(also DERV)
¦ noun Brit. diesel oil for motor vehicles.
Origin
1940s: acronym from diesel-engined road-vehicle.
gas oil         
  • [[Biodiesel]] made from [[soybean oil]]
  • Large diesel fuel tanks in [[Sörnäinen]], [[Helsinki]], [[Finland]]
  • does not mix]] with water. This picture also showcases the phenomenon of [[Thin-film interference]].
LIQUID FUEL USED IN DIESEL ENGINES
Petrodiesel; Gas oil; Diesel oil; Derv; DERV; Petroleum diesel; Dinodiesel; Disel fuel; Regular diesel; Fossil diesel; D2 Diesel; Synthetic diesel; Gazole (fuel); J-2 Diesel fuel; Vacuum gas oil
¦ noun a type of fuel oil distilled from petroleum and heavier than paraffin oil.
diesel engine         
  • Stationary 12 cylinder turbo-diesel engine coupled to a generator set for auxiliary power
  • inline five-cylinder]] marine diesel engine onboard a 29,000 tonne chemical carrier
  • One of the eight-cylinder 3200 I.H.P. Harland and Wolff – Burmeister & Wain diesel engines installed in the motorship ''Glenapp''. This was the highest powered diesel engine yet (1920) installed in a ship. Note man standing lower right for size comparison.
  • Engine noise of a 1950s [[MWM AKD 112 Z]] two-cylinder diesel engine at idle
  • Detroit Diesel timing
  • pV diagram for the ideal diesel cycle (which follows the numbers 1–4 in clockwise direction). The horizontal axis is the cylinder volume. In the diesel cycle the combustion occurs at almost constant pressure. On this diagram the work that is generated for each cycle corresponds to the area within the loop.
  • Schematic of a two-stroke diesel engine with a roots blower
  • An MAN DM trunk piston diesel engine built in 1906. The MAN DM series is considered to be one of the first commercially successful diesel engines.<ref name="Sass_1962_524" />
  • BMW E28 524td]], the first mass-produced passenger car with an electronically controlled injection pump
  • Diesel's second prototype. It is a modification of the first experimental engine. On 17 February 1894, this engine ran under its own power for the first time.<ref name="Diesel_1913_22" /><br /><br />Effective efficiency 16.6% <br />Fuel consumption 519&nbsp;g·kW<sup>−1</sup>·h<sup>−1</sup>
  • Fairbanks Morse model 32
  • First fully functional diesel engine, designed by Imanuel Lauster, built from scratch, and finished by October 1896.<ref name="Diesel_1913_64" /><ref name="Diesel_1913_75" /><ref name="Diesel_1913_78" /><br /><br />Rated power 13.1&nbsp;kW<br />Effective efficiency 26.2% <br />Fuel consumption 324&nbsp;g·kW<sup>−1</sup>·h<sup>−1</sup>.
  • Hand-cranking a boat diesel motor in [[Inle Lake]] ([[Myanmar]]).
  • [[Rudolf Diesel]]'s 1893 patent on a rational heat motor
  • The MAN 630's [[M-System]] diesel engine is a petrol engine (designed to run on NATO F 46/F 50 petrol), but it also runs on jet fuel, (NATO F 40/F 44), kerosene, (NATO F 58), and diesel engine fuel (NATO F 54/F 75)
  • Diesel engine model, right side
  • Diesel engine model, left side
  • Audi R10 TDI, 2006 24 Hours of Le Mans winner.
  • Mercedes-Benz OM 352]], one of the first direct injected Mercedes-Benz diesel engines. It was introduced in 1963, but mass production only started in summer 1964.<ref name="Vogler_2016_34" />
  • Air-cooled diesel engine of a 1959 Porsche 218
  • Ricardo Comet indirect injection chamber
  • Typical early 20th century air-blast injected diesel engine, rated at 59&nbsp;kW.
  • 1952 [[Shell Oil]] film showing the development of the diesel engine from 1877
  • Three English Electric 7SRL diesel-alternator sets being installed at the Saateni Power Station, [[Zanzibar]] 1955
  • Different types of piston bowls
  • Piston of an MAN [[M-System]] centre sphere combustion chamber type diesel engine ([[4 VD 14,5/12-1 SRW]])
INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINE WITH QUALITY ROTATIONAL FREQUENCY GOVERNING, INTERNAL MIXTURE FORMATION, LEAN AIR-FUEL-RATIO, DIFFUSION FLAME AND COMPRESSION IGNITION
Diesel Engine; Diesel engines; Medium speed engines; Compression ignition engine; Compression heating ignition; Start of injection; Diesel-engine; High Diesel Injection; Medium speed diesel engine; Diesel motor; Diesel motors; Compression-ignition; Compression ignition; Compression-ignition engine; Diesel knock; Scavenge blower; Solid injection; Diesel internal combustion engines; Diesel internal combustion engine; Diesel propulsion; Diesel propelled; Diesel (fuel); Deisel engine; Diesel vehicle; Diesel car; Direct injection diesel
(diesel engines)
A diesel engine is an internal combustion engine in which oil is burnt by very hot air. Diesel engines are used in buses and trucks, and in some trains and cars.
N-COUNT

Βικιπαίδεια

Diesel locomotive

A diesel locomotive is a type of railway locomotive in which the prime mover is a diesel engine. Several types of diesel locomotives have been developed, differing mainly in the means by which mechanical power is conveyed to the driving wheels.

Early internal combustion locomotives and railcars used kerosene and gasoline as their fuel. Rudolf Diesel patented his first compression-ignition engine in 1898, and steady improvements to the design of diesel engines reduced their physical size and improved their power-to-weight ratios to a point where one could be mounted in a locomotive. Internal combustion engines only operate efficiently within a limited power band, and while low power gasoline engines could be coupled to mechanical transmissions, the more powerful diesel engines required the development of new forms of transmission. This is because clutches would need to be very large at these power levels and would not fit in a standard 2.5 m (8 ft 2 in)-wide locomotive frame, or wear too quickly to be useful.

The first successful diesel engines used diesel–electric transmissions, and by 1925 a small number of diesel locomotives of 600 hp (450 kW) were in service in the United States. In 1930, Armstrong Whitworth of the United Kingdom delivered two 1,200 hp (890 kW) locomotives using Sulzer-designed engines to Buenos Aires Great Southern Railway of Argentina. In 1933, diesel–electric technology developed by Maybach was used to propel the DRG Class SVT 877, a high-speed intercity two-car set, and went into series production with other streamlined car sets in Germany starting in 1935. In the United States, diesel–electric propulsion was brought to high-speed mainline passenger service in late 1934, largely through the research and development efforts of General Motors dating back to the late 1920s and advances in lightweight car body design by the Budd Company.

The economic recovery from World War II caused the widespread adoption of diesel locomotives in many countries. They offered greater flexibility and performance than steam locomotives, as well as substantially lower operating and maintenance costs.