DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT CRITERIA FOR AUTOMOTIVE DIESELS
A field survey of diesel engines in light commercial trucks showed that the failure profile could be described by an early failure region, indicative of manufacturing quality, and an exponential distribution, representing the reliability of the engine, merging into a log-normal wearout region. An overall reliability of 0.9 after a year's service was apparently required. Engine availability could be improved significantly, in a cost effective manner, by the selective upgrading of components and sub-assemblies according to their criticality. Conventional design criteria do not recognise the need for modifying the failure risk of individual parts and assemblies according to their likely impact on the operational behaviour of the engine as a whole. An alternative methodology was derived, therefore, as part of the design and validation of a 5.81 (354 in 3) engine intended predominantly for the N. American Class VI truck market. The development of this revised design and development approach is described.
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Corporate Authors:
Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE)
400 Commonwealth Drive
Warrendale, PA United States 15096 -
Authors:
- BERTODO, R
- Publication Date: 1977-3
Media Info
- Features: References;
- Pagination: 13 p.
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Costs; Design; Diesel engines; Engines; Failure; Reliability; Trucks; Vehicle power plants
- Uncontrolled Terms: Design criteria
- Old TRIS Terms: Automobile engines; Truck engines
- Subject Areas: Design; Finance; Highways; Motor Carriers; Safety and Human Factors; Vehicles and Equipment;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00158333
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: Engineering Index
- Report/Paper Numbers: SAE 770033 Preprint
- Files: TRIS
- Created Date: Oct 13 1977 12:00AM