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adnj wrote:Yes. A volume of LPG does have more energy than CNG. IIRC, LPG in 3x more energy dense than CNG @3000 PSI.
LPG requires a lower compression ratio than is acceptable for gasoline to achieve maximum fuel economy. Compression ratio, thermal characteristics, and a few other reasons are the cause of lower fuel economy in converted engines.
It isn't recommended, but I have seen LPG tanks refilled in garages by turning the donor tank upside down.
Where did you do your installation?Ted_v2 wrote:Anyone still looking for retrofits?
cng really made a few drastic improvements over the last few years from what you guys know, smaller lighter components, more tuning software and ecu changes. Works really well. highly recommended.
1/4 mile king wrote:I saw a modern day wagon this weekend being towed to a cng pump. The vehicle runs on cng only ( no gasoline system ) . He ran out of cng basically. IDK persons had vehicles doing that still. From what I understand, the liquid gasoline prevents your engine from running 2 lean and frying pistons etc by using its cooling effect inside the cylinders. The system I have uses a 13% gasoline : 87% cng ratio based on fuel consumption calculations. It's calibrated to ensure
that my engine doesn't damage by being 2 lean. Just think it's 2 risky and being a cheapo running on cng only.
Would the new software allow for simultaneous injection of gasoline and cng?Ted_v2 wrote:Anyone still looking for retrofits?
cng really made a few drastic improvements over the last few years from what you guys know, smaller lighter components, more tuning software and ecu changes. Works really well. highly recommended.
wingnut wrote:1/4 mile king wrote:I saw a modern day wagon this weekend being towed to a cng pump. The vehicle runs on cng only ( no gasoline system ) . He ran out of cng basically. IDK persons had vehicles doing that still. From what I understand, the liquid gasoline prevents your engine from running 2 lean and frying pistons etc by using its cooling effect inside the cylinders. The system I have uses a 13% gasoline : 87% cng ratio based on fuel consumption calculations. It's calibrated to ensure
that my engine doesn't damage by being 2 lean. Just think it's 2 risky and being a cheapo running on cng only.
Good info. I always thought cng vehicles were running on either gas or cng at a time. Is yours a oem or conversion?
You have to spend $700 per month in refills. I hear the mileage is better as they give you two tanks (only one connected at a time) but the cost per km is higher than CNG. My insurance agent already informed me that if I do the conversion he will not be renewing my car insurance.1/4 mile king wrote:https://twitter.com/gottaluvness69/status/1731041609838682228 ..
See above for ramco LPG. Are there any feedback or reviews on the ramco LPG Kits? I would like to know what's the catch? How many refills are you mandated to buy per month? $87 per refill but what is the amount in liters per refill and what's the average range per tank for a 2000cc N/A gasoline engine SUV? Is it a dual system as in, does it use a gasoline and LPG mixture or LPG alone when on LPG?
killercow wrote:You have to spend $700 per month in refills. I hear the mileage is better as they give you two tanks (only one connected at a time) but the cost per km is higher than CNG. My insurance agent already informed me that if I do the conversion he will not be renewing my car insurance.1/4 mile king wrote:https://twitter.com/gottaluvness69/status/1731041609838682228 ..
See above for ramco LPG. Are there any feedback or reviews on the ramco LPG Kits? I would like to know what's the catch? How many refills are you mandated to buy per month? $87 per refill but what is the amount in liters per refill and what's the average range per tank for a 2000cc N/A gasoline engine SUV? Is it a dual system as in, does it use a gasoline and LPG mixture or LPG alone when on LPG?
sMASH wrote:But lpg in the country donkey years, and no srs problem... So... It safe enough
Yep cng is 3000+ psi depending on the pump and the temperature.1/4 mile king wrote:sMASH wrote:But lpg in the country donkey years, and no srs problem... So... It safe enough
What I meant was in comparison to CNG which easily diffuses into the atmosphere making it too lean to ignite. If there's a leak or a collision the vapor of LPG doesn't easily diffuse into the air leaving a very dangerous situation compared to CNG. A CNG cylinder is stronger I believe, since it's design to contain a lot of pressure. I think in this forum someone mentioned that the old cng kits from the 90s. Persons used lpg to refill them and ran on lpg while there weren't any cng stations available. I highly doubt you can use cng in a lpg tank due to the high storage pressure of cng. Kindly correct me if i am mistaken.
Halfbreed07 wrote:I have a 2010 L200 with a factory installed cng kit, I did a full up today and went for a drive along the very bad Arima old road. Mid way up the hill I started to smell the cng very faintly inside the cabin, I switched back to diesel. Then when I hit the hiway I tried the CNG again, this time the smell was stronger. We only recently go this van and it's my first CNG vehicle. Is this normal after a full up or is it possible that I got a leak from driving along the rough road? Yes I'll check the mech, but I wanted to know if anyone experienced something similar and if it was an easy fix.
Kind Regards.
triniguy868 wrote:***CVT KITS***
Now on my 2nd Transmission CVT has been a challenge.
Anyone knows a reputable CVT mech who can "re-build" the one I currently have?
Honda City 2016 CNG
Dave wrote:Also throwing in Flash and Jai for rebuilding transmissions. Both in Aranguez.
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