Coolpower

A coolpower setup in a truck engine uses an aftercooler on the cylinder head and a tip turbine fan to draw heat away from the cylinder head and ram air over the aftercooler. Large Mack trucks from the 1970s such as the Mack R-600 used coolpower systems. Some coolpower systems used vertical bar shutters that could be opened and shut in front of the radiator to maintain proper operating temperature.

The Mack Cruise Liner model built in 1984, a 6X4 Primemover, used a 320 horsepower (240 kW) coolpower engine.[1]

Other meanings

Air intakes on turbochargers

The term is also used to refer to “Cool Power” air intake systems for turbocharged engines. These systems provide cooler air to the turbocharger and engine, instead of the potentially too-warm air from the engine compartment. Cooler intake air is denser, which means that the engine can produce the same power with less fuel. Cooler air also gives the engine more power for applications such as towing heavy loads up driving up steep grades during the summer. Cooler air drawn into the engine compartment lowers the temperature under the hood, which allows plastic, rubber and electronic parts to last longer. Lastly, cool power systems will supports larger turbochargers by creating additional air flow to the engine.[2]

Hydraulic drive system

The US military uses the expression "cool power" to describe its "regenerative drive unit", a "light-weight hybrid hydraulic drive system" that weighs 330 pounds. The "system can generate nearly 1,000 foot-pounds force (1,400 N·m) of torque and power equivalent to a 340 horsepower (250 kW) engine." It operates by storing "energy normally lost as heat during the braking process in a high-pressure oil tank called an accumulator." The system use two hydraulic-fluid storage devices controlled by a central processor. One of the reasons the US military is interested in the system is that its "cool" power allows vehicles to move "... without generating a "thermal footprint" that can be identified by enemy tracking systems."[3]

References

  1. Trucks Plus
  2. http://www.psmdiesel.com/air_03_without.html
  3. Permo-Drive Unveils Compact Hydraulic Drive System at 2003 SAE Show
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/11/2011. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.