Maximum power: 108,920 hp at 102 rpm Maximum torque: 5,608,312 lb/ft at 102rpm The Wartsila-Sulzer RTA96-C turbocharged two-stroke diesel engine is the most powerful and most efficient prime-mover in the world today. The Aioi Works of Japan 's Diesel United, Ltd built the first engines and is where some of these pictures were taken. It is available in 6 through 14 cylinder versions, all are inline engines. These engines were designed primarily for very large container ships. Ship owners like a single engine/single propeller design and the new generation of larger container ships needed a bigger engine to propel them. The cylinder bore is just under 38" and the stroke is just over 98". Each cylinder displaces 111,143 cubic inches (1820 liters) and produces 7780 horsepower. Total displacement comes out to 1,556,002 cubic inches (25,480 liters) for the fourteen cylinder version. Some facts on the 14 cylinder version: Total engine weight: 2300 tons (The crankshaft alone weighs 300 tons.) Length: 89 feet Height: 44 feet Maximum power: 108,920 hp at 102 rpm Maximum torque: 5,608,312 lb/ft at 102rpm Fuel consumption at maximum power is 0.278 lbs per hp per hour (Brake Specific Fuel Consumption). Fuel consumption at maximum economy is 0.260 lbs/hp/hour. At maximum economy the engine exceeds 50% thermal efficiency. That is, more than 50% of the energy in the fuel in converted to motion. For comparison, most automotive and small aircraft engines have BSFC figures in the 0.40-0.60 lbs/hp/hr range and 25-30% thermal efficiency range. Even at its most efficient power setting, the big 14 consumes 1,660 gallons of heavy fuel oil per hour.
The internals of this engine are a bit different than most automotive engines. The top of the connecting rod is not attached directly to the piston. The top of the connecting rod attaches to a "crosshead" which rides in guide channels. A long piston rod then connects the crosshead to the piston. I assume this is done so the the sideways forces produced by the connecting rod are absorbed by the crosshead and not by the piston. Those sideways forces are what makes the cylinders in an auto engine get oval-shaped over time. Installing the "thin-shell" bearings. Crank & rod journals are 38" in diameter and 16" wide: The crank sitting in the block (also known as a "gondola-style" bedplate). This is a 10 cylinder version. Note the steps by each crank throw that lead down into the crankcase: A piston & piston rod assembly. The piston is at the top. The large square plate at the bottom is where the whole assembly attaches to the crosshead: The "spikes" on the piston rods are hollow tubes that go into the holes you can see on the bottom of the pistons (left picture) and inject oil into the inside of the piston which keeps the top of the piston from overheating. Some high-performance auto engines have a similar feature where an oil squirter nozzle squirts oil onto the bottom of the piston.
The cylinder deck (10 cylinder version). Cylinder liners are die-cast ductile cast iron. Look at the size of those head studs!: The first completed 12 cylinder engine:
Hi, I got this exact info in an e mail at the weekend. These engines at full wellie are amongst the most fuel efficient engines ever.
I would not want to have hand crank one of those Thanks for sharing - makes me wish I'd been an engineer.
Here are some more of an engine undergoing some routine maintenance while the deckies are loading cargo. Removing an exhaust valve: Removing the bolts on a main bearing cap: Removing the bearing cap: Main bearing: Inlet manifold: The tunnels on the right are the air inlets to the cylinders. That is a walkway down the center, the openings at the end are the connection to the other sections of the manifold.
Anbody want to make a belt out of this timing chain? Here's the Big End: Lower end of connecting rod at crank throw. The top end of this connects the crosshead to the piston rod. Not a "cell phone" engineer: Scraping a main bearing. This bearing had somewhere over 20,000 hours on it at the time but the ship had a slight twist in the hull that showed up as localized wear on several of the main bearings. This corrected the uneven wear.
Scraping the bearing Hi all, Yeah... like in good old years. There are not so many specialists left who really can do this. I met only 3 in last 10 years. P.S. "WARTSILA rulez !!!" Brgds, Andrei
My pictures show a MAN B&W ... and they now build a 94 rpm 14 cylinder 130,481 horsepower engine that leaves Wartsila kind of lacking in the power race. The pictures I posted are of an 11 cylinder 66,400hp engine, it's kind of lame in comparison since it can only pull a little over 6000hp out of a cylinder vs around 9300 for the big one. Regardless of the size, these slow speed engines are awesome machines to operate and work on.