I can understand the complaints of the suppliers.
Besides the damage that could be caused buy the vacuum, the regulator will go to full throttle, thus full fuel injection, because it wants the engine to maintain its RPM's during the choking-procedure. This causes much fuel to be injected without it burning afterward. If you do this on regular basis (for "testing") the exchaust system will be fauled, inculding the turbine. When the engine is stopped the regulator will still be in max. position, so if you forget about this later on the overspeed trip device will be tested at the next start also.
So all in all, why would you stop an engine by choking it? In case of emergency on a (navy) ship, the air will be taken away anyway. By fire, CO2, Halon or even water, you name it. But in most cases even before that time the fuel has already been shut off if you did your routine well, and the engine is already at standstill.As far as I can think of it could be that engines on a navy ship must meet these regulations because of preventing entering Chem/Bio weapens to the engine room. When under attack i assume the air-inlets will be closed, so the engines will start vacuuming the engine room. To prevent this from happaning it could come in handy to be able to directly cut of the air supply to the engine. But now i'm pretty much guessing. I'm a merchant engineer myself.
I would not test it myself, (but it would look pretty cool on paper tho ;-) ) mainly because of the fauling, but i sail engines running on HFO, which causes much more fauling and corrosion in the engine then lighter fuels.
About the overspeed testing, i think this is not so much of a problem. I dont know the regulations in the US navy, but as far as i rememeber ( I have nothing to check it overhere right now) our regulations are: electrical overspeed cut-out on 112% and mechanical on 115%. The engine is running on the testbed at 110% too (according our classification rules), so if you don't run just below the cut-out speed for more than the period to push it though to the trip, I don't see any harm in doing it. You better know it works. You don't kick back a crankshaftcover or counterweight when its coming out. To illustrate this with a story, on a very old ship in our company, an auxiliary engine (abt. 400 kW) had problems and had to testrun. The overspeed didn't work either. They needed about 4 people to start this engine. One of them was an apprentice. Not one of the cleverest as you might understand later on. Various people were doing their things and the apprentice had to control the fuel-rack by hand. I don't know what was explained to him, but after the engine was started he kept pushing the fuel-rack to max. A few seconds later a load crunchy sound and the whole engine was welded or crushed inside, from crackshaft, bearings, liners, cylinders, cyl. heads and valve gears. They were very lucky nothing came out of the crankcase because it had been running well over 115%,m but when an engine is running this speed and it's coming to a standstill in a few tenth of a second, big chance things come loose.
So you better have a working overspeed trip.
Bart
![[worm] [worm] [worm]](/data/assets/smilies/worm.gif)