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Date:         Thu, 23 Jan 97 16:18:12 EST
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From:         jag@cs.rochester.edu
Subject:      Diesel emmissions. Was: Diesel verse gas?

In (extremely short) summary:

A correctly tuned diesel has lower CO CO2 NOx emmissions than a gas engine, but higher particulates. If particulates are so high so you actually see "soot" from the tail pipe your VW diesel is incorrectly tuned.

For those of you seriously interested in emmissions I would recommend the following research monograph:

CORPORATE AUTHOR: National Research Council (U.S.). Diesel Impacts Study Commi> TITLE: Diesel cars : benefits, risks, and public policy : final report of t> IMPRINT: Washington, D.C. : National Academy Press, 1982.

This covers technology in the research labs up to '82, which is what we see in our cars today. Paul Dempsey talks a little about modern (to appear in the future) diesel emmissions controls in his newest diesel repair text book (TAB books), but I wasn't impressed with his explanations. For current research reports chech the SAE tech. report series or the several scientific journals in the area of power and combustion technology.

The European automakers are actively pursuing small automotive diesel engine development (typ about 1l 3 cyl engines) to meet new (.2 to .3 l/10km) fuel milage goals. European rules and taxes favors low total fuel consumption and emmissions and small engines.

/Martin


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