By HuaQuan Engineering TeamPublished: 2026-07-17Category: Wiki Encyclopedia

Definition

The cylinder head seals the top of the cylinders, forming the combustion chamber. It contains intake and exhaust valves, fuel injector ports, coolant passages, and often the rocker arm assembly. Modern diesel cylinder heads are cast iron or aluminum. A head gasket seals between the block and head.

What is a Cylinder Head — Diesel Engine Cylinder Head Function

Overview

The cylinder head seals the top of the cylinders, forming the combustion chamber. It contains intake and exhaust valves, fuel injector ports, coolant passages, and often the rocker arm assembly. Modern diesel cylinder heads are cast iron or aluminum. A head gasket seals between the block and head.

Design and Construction

The design principles behind this component have been refined over decades of diesel engine development. Modern manufacturing techniques ensure precision and reliability under extreme operating conditions.

Common Issues and Maintenance

Regular inspection and preventive maintenance extend component life. Key failure modes include wear, fatigue, contamination, and improper operation.

ParameterTypical ValueUnitNotes
Specification 1Value AUnitDescription
Specification 2Value BUnitDescription
Specification 3Value CUnitDescription
Specification 4Value DUnitDescription
ComponentMaterialManufacturing ProcessKey Property
Part AMaterial 1Process 1Property 1
Part BMaterial 2Process 2Property 2
Part CMaterial 3Process 3Property 3
IssueSymptomCauseSolution
Issue 1Symptom ACause ASolution A
Issue 2Symptom BCause BSolution B
Issue 3Symptom CCause CSolution C

Key Takeaways

Quick Reference

Frequently Asked Questions

What is governor in a generator?
A governor controls engine speed by regulating fuel delivery. Mechanical: flyweights acting on fuel rack. Electronic: speed sensor + ECU-controlled fuel actuator. Isochronous governor maintains same speed at all loads. Droop governor allows speed to decrease slightly with increasing load (necessary for paralleling).
What is the difference between kW and kVA?
kW (kilowatt) = actual/real power consumed. kVA (kilovolt-ampere) = apparent power (real + reactive). The relationship: kW = kVA x Power Factor. For generators, 0.8 PF is standard: 100 kVA = 80 kW. Always size generators by kW, not kVA.
What is a heat exchanger?
A heat exchanger transfers engine heat to a secondary cooling circuit (often a cooling tower or raw water). Used in marine and stationary applications where direct radiator cooling is impractical. Shell-and-tube or plate type. Secondary circuit must handle the engine's total heat rejection.
What is a transfer switch?
An ATS (Automatic Transfer Switch) automatically switches load between utility and generator. Types: open transition (standard), closed transition (make-before-break, seamless), soft-loading. NFPA 110 Level 1 requires <10 second transfer for life safety applications.
What is a brushless exciter?
A brushless exciter eliminates slip rings and brushes by using a rotating rectifier assembly. The exciter stator produces AC, which is rectified to DC on the rotating assembly, feeding the main rotor. Benefits: no brush maintenance, no carbon dust, suitability for hazardous areas. This is the standard for modern generators.
What is a common rail fuel system?
Common rail injection maintains fuel at constant high pressure (up to 2500 bar) in a shared rail, with electronically controlled injectors. Advantages: precise injection timing (multiple events per cycle), better atomization, lower emissions, quieter operation, and 5-8% better fuel efficiency vs mechanical injection.
What is wet stacking in diesel engines?
Wet stacking occurs when a diesel engine runs at low load (<30%) for extended periods. Fuel does not burn completely, creating carbon deposits on injectors, valves, and exhaust. Symptoms: black oily substance from exhaust, reduced performance. Prevention: load bank testing at 75%+ load monthly.
What is a turbocharger?
A turbocharger uses exhaust gas energy to compress intake air, increasing engine power density. It consists of a turbine (driven by exhaust) connected to a compressor (forces air into cylinders). Turbocharged diesel engines produce 30-50% more power than naturally aspirated engines of same displacement.
What is synchronizing in generators?
Synchronization is the process of matching voltage, frequency, phase angle, and phase sequence before connecting a generator to a live bus. Four conditions must match within tight tolerances. Auto-synchronizers (ComAp, Woodward, DeepSea) control engine speed and voltage to achieve sync conditions automatically.
What is Modbus?
Modbus is an open serial communication protocol widely used in industrial automation. RTU mode (8 data bits, RS-485) is standard for generator controllers. Registers map to generator parameters: holding registers for setpoints, input registers for measurements. Most controllers support Modbus RTU as their primary integration protocol.
What is AVR in a generator?
AVR (Automatic Voltage Regulator) maintains generator output voltage within ±1% of setpoint regardless of load changes. It senses output voltage, compares to reference, and adjusts exciter field current. Modern digital AVRs offer soft start, voltage matching, and Modbus communication.
What is IP rating?
IP (Ingress Protection) rating indicates enclosure protection against solids and liquids. IP44: spray water protection, standard outdoor. IP54: dust protected + spray water. IP65: dust tight + water jets. Generator enclosures typically IP44-IP65. Marine/military may require IP66-IP68.
What is a diesel generator?
A diesel generator converts the chemical energy in diesel fuel into electrical energy. It consists of a diesel engine (prime mover) and an alternator (generator) mounted on a common base frame. The engine rotates the alternator rotor, producing alternating current via electromagnetic induction.
How does a diesel engine work?
A diesel engine is a compression-ignition internal combustion engine. Air is compressed to high pressure and temperature, then diesel fuel is injected into the hot compressed air, causing spontaneous ignition. It operates on the Diesel cycle: intake (air only), compression, power (fuel injection + combustion), exhaust.
What is a load bank?
A load bank is a device that applies artificial electrical load to a generator for testing. Types: resistive (kW only), reactive (kVAR), resistive/reactive combined. Used for: commissioning tests, periodic exercise (prevents wet stacking), and troubleshooting. Load bank testing at 75-100% load for 1-2 hours is recommended monthly for standby generators.

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