the govenor is a magic bit of balancing....
essentially some weights get thrown about with engine speed and some springs try to keep them in check. in a fixed speed engine (like a genset) thats all there is the govenor is set at one speed and will do what it can to make sure that RPM is maintaintained.. Great for gensets bad for cars
so we have what was once known as the variable speed govenor its essentially the same but your throttle pedal links into the balancing act in such a way as to bias the tension on the springs or the weights..
in both cases the springs and weights move the bit of the fuel injection system that controls how much fuel is going into the injectors to feed the engine.
if the weights are winning the tug of war then the engine is going too fast so they will act on the fuel control to reduce engine speed
if the springs are winning then the engine fuel control is acted on to add more fuel as the engine is going too slowly.
think of it this way...
when you stomp on the loud pedal you are not asking the engine to make more power but to make more RPM's
the throttle pedal usually has no direct influence on how much fuel is going into the injectors it acts indirectly by changing the balance point of the springs and the weights.
once you get around all that there are a couple of limits that are imposed on the system by the designers the first is Idle speed, this is the point where the engine idles and the springs counter the weights at the lowest speed the engine is designed to turn at. The other other is the max speed limiter and this is essentially the point where you can no longer influence the springs to overcome the weights which means you cant use the noise pedal to make the engine over rev.
theres lots of ways you can govern a diesel with electronics, air pressure, mechanically (the most common but being replaced by electronic means) hydraulicly or a combination of the above. You can also govern for torque, power or as already covered RPM.
there is also usually a method of causing a shut down, it used to be a case of just winding the springs back till the weights pulled the fuel control all the way off but you can also do that manually as per the old 2.25 diesel and the series, or you can turn the fuel off electrically (like a tdi) turn the injectors off electronically (like a TD5).
thats basically govenors.



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