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Re: OT: Debian Mailinglist server slow?



On Mon, Sep 01, 2003 at 07:15:27AM +0800, David Palmer wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 31, 2003 at 09:57:26AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > The DEs I've seen trundling past my house create very little exhaust.
> > Steam engines create a *lot*, and need to be regularly replenished
> > with consumables.  DEs just look to be more fuel efficient, and less
> > offensive to the neighborhood.
> 
> Just because you can't see it, don't mean it ain't there.

Diesel engines are several times better in terms of thermal efficiency
than steam. For the same useful energy output, a diesel will consume
much less fuel than a steamer and produce correspondingly less
exhaust. Also, steamers generally burn coal, which generates more CO2
per unit energy than oil.

(The picture changes where burning renewable fuels is concerned; the
CO2 emissions don't matter, and the ability to burn any old crap is an
advantage. Sugar plantations have used steam locos fuelled by burning
the processed plant waste, for example.)

As far as the visible particulate emissions from a steamer are
concerned, they are universally built to a design which received
government approval as able to consume its own smoke, dating from the
very beginnings of steam locomotive traction. How well this is
actually achieved depends a lot on the skill of the fireman. (And
maintenance levels, but this applies to diesels too of course.)

British 1950s-design DMUs had an interesting particulate emissions
bug; at a particular (fairly low) engine speed, a resonance would
develop in the exhaust system that prevented the cylinders from
inducing a full charge of pure air. As they accelerated away from a
station, suddenly the exhausts would make this blattering noise and
black smoke would pour out until they got beyond the critical speed.

-- 
Pigeon

Be kind to pigeons
Get my GPG key here: http://pgp.mit.edu:11371/pks/lookup?op=get&search=0x21C61F7F

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