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Distillate fuel, distallate prime movers

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Distillate fuel, distallate prime movers
Posted by Knnashley on Monday, November 13, 2006 7:32 PM

What is distillate fuel - gasoline, diesel, kerosene, or other?

What is a distillate prime mover (engine) - spark iginition or compression ignition? Compression ratios?What companies made them? Dates in general use?

I've seen many mentions in the railfan literature, but never a clear explanation/description.

 

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Posted by M636C on Tuesday, November 14, 2006 5:22 AM
 Knnashley wrote:

What is distillate fuel - gasoline, diesel, kerosene, or other?

What is a distillate prime mover (engine) - spark iginition or compression ignition? Compression ratios?What companies made them? Dates in general use?

I've seen many mentions in the railfan literature, but never a clear explanation/description.

The distillate engines are best represented by the Winton engines in the EMC railcars. These were conventional spark ignition gasoline engines with low compression ratio by current standards and capable of running on fuel of about 40 Octane rating.

The "distillate" was a refinery product that contained the fractions between the highly flammable gasoline and the tar like fuel oil, and is generally thought of as being like diesel oil or kerosene, but didn't have a fixed specification and could vary depending on the type of crude oil going through the refinery. The Wintons could burn it, but they had to be started and warmed up on real gasoline.

The Santa Fe gave up and used unleaded gasoline from the mid 1930s because the cost saving from using distillate was exceeded by the increase in maintenance costs on the engine. This was particularly so in the case of the big V-16 in the articulated Santa Fe baggage car unit. known as the "old Pelican".

M636C

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Posted by PBenham on Tuesday, November 14, 2006 5:08 PM
A lot of people would be baffled by this term. Distillate is very hard to find today, since refiners are manufacturing higher profit margin gasoline, diesel (three+ versions) or home heating oil. If you can find that stuff, it would be impractically expensive for most applications it was used for.
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Posted by CSSHEGEWISCH on Wednesday, November 15, 2006 10:12 AM

Dad worked a lifetime for a major oil company so I absorbed a few things about the destructive distillation of crude oil (refining process) over the years.  It sounds like distillate comes from a feedstock somewhere between kerosene and Bunker C.  I am aware of light, medium and heavy distillates that come off the initial fractionation of crude oil and are further refined into narrower ranges for a variety of products ranging from lube oils (heavy) to No. 2 diesel oil (light).

The daily commute is part of everyday life but I get two rides a day out of it. Paul

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