To try and answer your question on detonation, I offer these observations:
When the engine I tested yesterday was cold, I let a quantity of LPG flow into the manifold of the stationary engine. When I started it there was a CLEAR AND OBVIOUS DETONATION EVENT. So yes excess LPG will detonate in a cold engine. Next test: applying LPG fumigation to a cold engine under load produced smoke/shaking but no obvious detonation. So ditto my comments on running fumigation only in a warm engine. Next test was on the road with the engine at operating temperature, fumigation on. Power level increase as noted. On reaching governor controlled revs the diesel delivery drops right off and the LPG DID NOT NOTICEABLY DETONATE. Boost pressure dropped rapidly and combustion was quiet. It would indicate that any possible LPG-only detonation was minuscule and unlikely to damage the engine under these conditions.
I am not arguing that CONTINUOUS use of the extra power is not harmful to the engine, various posts indicate that this likely to decrease engine life. It would of course help if someone thrashed their d-gas engine consistently hard and then dismantled it. How long will be long enough to detect these signs? I am the wrong person to ask.



Pat
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