RI 2487 Gasoline Saved on Government Trucks by Adjusting Carburetors by Exhaust-Gas Analysis

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 1508 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 1, 1923
Abstract
Tests were made at the Government Fuel Yard , operated at Washington , D. C. by
the Bureau of Mines , Department of the Interior , in order to determine and improve
the adjustment of the carburetors on the trucks used for transporting coal from the
Fuel Yard to the different Government buildings in Washington .
The tests were made possible through the hearty cooperation of G , S. Pope ,
engineer in charge of the Fuel Yard . Joseph Burrows and A. E. Foote of the garage
department assisted during all the tests and supplied information on the mileage obtained
by the trucks for the months preceding and succeding the time the tests were
made .
The Mack trucks used range in capacity from 2-1/2 to 7-1/2 ttoonnss .. The majority
of the carburetors were Stromberg G- 3 type , as shown in Table 2. During the winter
months , when the demand for coal is heavy , from 30 to 35 trucks are used . At the
time the tests were made , only about ten of the trucks were in daily use , owing to
the small demand for coal during the summer months , and scarcity due to labor conditions
.
Samples of the exhaust gas were taken on the trucks kept in service for summer
hauling in order to determine the carburetor adjustment as used . Changes were then
made to a more economical adjustment wherever possible , without sacrificing flexibility
of operation and power . In every case the adjustments were maintained for maximum
power , but were adjusted to the leanest position to give that power . In all but one
case the carburetors were found to be adjusted too rich for maximum power and economy .
These results are considered in detail in a later part of this report .
Citation
APA:
(1923) RI 2487 Gasoline Saved on Government Trucks by Adjusting Carburetors by Exhaust-Gas AnalysisMLA: RI 2487 Gasoline Saved on Government Trucks by Adjusting Carburetors by Exhaust-Gas Analysis. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1923.