Mimbrogno
Automotive
- Sep 7, 2006
- 5
Greetings from the crew of the Arizona Railway Museum.
I came across this forum and thought you might be interested in taking a crack at a problem that's had us beat for months. Our small locomotive, a 1943 30 ton Plymouth, is powered by a 1943 Le Roi RX-1V 250hp V8 gasoline engine that has been poppen and backfiring. The engine has 6 3/4" cylinders, each with twin sparkplugs positioned to fire about 20 degrees apart (one's in the head, the other's in the block), and two seperate destributers firing the different banks of sparkplugs. The original two distributers were four position types with a second point added so it would work a V8 engine. These were replaced by two conventional Chevy 8 position single point distributers in an attenpt to resolve to backfiring. Other features of this engine are that it has only two valves per head, and the engine is made up of 4 individual engine blocks with 2 cylinders each, connected to a common baseplate that holds the crankshaft and camshaft. The exhaust manifold has a water jacket connected between the coolant outlet on the engine and the inlet on the radiator. There is no muffler.
You should also know a little of the engine's history; A few years ago when we were moving some cars around, one of the cylinders failed, resulting in a 2x3 inch hole in the cylinder wall of one of the engine blocks and a great deal of water being blown out of the smoke stack. We were able to repair the engine by using a sleeve and reinforcing the area over the hole by welding. A subsequent effect of the cylinder wall failure was that the head above it had also developed a water leak, and it took over a dozen repair attempts for finally fix it. The engine does not currently leak any water into the crankcase or any air chambers. Part of the repair required a new cylinder head gasket made of pure copper, where as the old gasket was laminated metal layers and was slightly thicker than the new gasket that is installed. I feel it might have altered the compression ratio slightly, but we feel that it is not severe enough to cause the backfiring.
These are the symptoms we are experiancing:
We have resolved the most severe backfiring by rewiring the ignition system and installing the new distributers, but it still pops quite a bit. It pops the worst when just starting up, and it takes a few minutes with the throttle raised before it dies down a little. The popping is also worse in damp weather when the air gets a little heavier. When we have the engine under load (especially a heavy one), the popping stops alltogether, but it will start again soon after the engine is relaxed.
If you are interested, a few vidoes of this engine in operation have been posted online , and you can clearly hear for yourself how the engine runs. The first is of the engine starting up. The other engine heard at the begining of the clip is our other locomotive with a 1950 Baldwin 600sc 1625hp inline 8 cylinder diesel.
This clip shows the Plymouth in motion. It is driven by a 4 speed mechanical gearbox. The big lever that the engineer steps on just before stopping is the clutch.
Please note that these vidoes were taken before the new distributers were installed, and it no longer makes the loudest BANGS you hear.
If anyone has any suggestions as to what we could do to fix this engine, or anything we should look into that we might have overlooked, please offer them! Any help that you could give is very greatfully appreciated!!
Matthew Imbrogno
Mechanical Vollenteer - Arizona Railway Museum.
I came across this forum and thought you might be interested in taking a crack at a problem that's had us beat for months. Our small locomotive, a 1943 30 ton Plymouth, is powered by a 1943 Le Roi RX-1V 250hp V8 gasoline engine that has been poppen and backfiring. The engine has 6 3/4" cylinders, each with twin sparkplugs positioned to fire about 20 degrees apart (one's in the head, the other's in the block), and two seperate destributers firing the different banks of sparkplugs. The original two distributers were four position types with a second point added so it would work a V8 engine. These were replaced by two conventional Chevy 8 position single point distributers in an attenpt to resolve to backfiring. Other features of this engine are that it has only two valves per head, and the engine is made up of 4 individual engine blocks with 2 cylinders each, connected to a common baseplate that holds the crankshaft and camshaft. The exhaust manifold has a water jacket connected between the coolant outlet on the engine and the inlet on the radiator. There is no muffler.
You should also know a little of the engine's history; A few years ago when we were moving some cars around, one of the cylinders failed, resulting in a 2x3 inch hole in the cylinder wall of one of the engine blocks and a great deal of water being blown out of the smoke stack. We were able to repair the engine by using a sleeve and reinforcing the area over the hole by welding. A subsequent effect of the cylinder wall failure was that the head above it had also developed a water leak, and it took over a dozen repair attempts for finally fix it. The engine does not currently leak any water into the crankcase or any air chambers. Part of the repair required a new cylinder head gasket made of pure copper, where as the old gasket was laminated metal layers and was slightly thicker than the new gasket that is installed. I feel it might have altered the compression ratio slightly, but we feel that it is not severe enough to cause the backfiring.
These are the symptoms we are experiancing:
We have resolved the most severe backfiring by rewiring the ignition system and installing the new distributers, but it still pops quite a bit. It pops the worst when just starting up, and it takes a few minutes with the throttle raised before it dies down a little. The popping is also worse in damp weather when the air gets a little heavier. When we have the engine under load (especially a heavy one), the popping stops alltogether, but it will start again soon after the engine is relaxed.
If you are interested, a few vidoes of this engine in operation have been posted online , and you can clearly hear for yourself how the engine runs. The first is of the engine starting up. The other engine heard at the begining of the clip is our other locomotive with a 1950 Baldwin 600sc 1625hp inline 8 cylinder diesel.
This clip shows the Plymouth in motion. It is driven by a 4 speed mechanical gearbox. The big lever that the engineer steps on just before stopping is the clutch.
Please note that these vidoes were taken before the new distributers were installed, and it no longer makes the loudest BANGS you hear.
If anyone has any suggestions as to what we could do to fix this engine, or anything we should look into that we might have overlooked, please offer them! Any help that you could give is very greatfully appreciated!!
Matthew Imbrogno
Mechanical Vollenteer - Arizona Railway Museum.