Hey everyone, I'd appreciate a little help/advice. I'm in a situation where I'm being accused of causing damage to a hot engine from liquid nitrogen being sprayed into it. Any white papers or studies would be thankfully accepted.
Google cryogenic treatment of metals...there are long term effects since the structure of the metal is changed. I don't know if there are dimensional changes associated with the structure change.Funny thing is the real answer is it wouldn't do anything. Liquid nitrogen takes so little energy to vaporize that you would have a hell of a time trying to even get it to slightly cool the engine. Anyone who has played with LN2 knows you can dump it on a person and it just feels like cool air to them. You'd have to immerse the entire engine into a vat of LN2 to have any kind of effect and even so I bet there would be no long term effects as long as you let it warm up again.
Doh!
I know this because of Honda engines.No problem, aluminum is better because it expands more than cast iron.
Where does LN2 come from, anyway?Oh please don't do that.
You know that if you use LN2 on something it doesn't just "disappear" after - it actually gets sucked up into the atmosphere.
God knows were pumping enough pollutants into the atmosphere as it is - we don't need another thing!
Wait a sec... google is a (search) engine. Is it aluminum or cast iron? I might have to switch to Bing. Or is it Bling? I'm so confused.
Hey everyone, I'd appreciate a little help/advice. I'm in a situation where I'm being accused of causing damage to a hot engine from liquid nitrogen being sprayed into it. Any white papers or studies would be thankfully accepted.
Where does LN2 come from, anyway?
Wait a sec... google is a (search) engine. Is it aluminum or cast iron? I might have to switch to Bing. Or is it Bling? I'm so confused.
Hey everyone, I'd appreciate a little help/advice. I'm in a situation where I'm being accused of causing damage to a hot engine from liquid nitrogen being sprayed into it. Any white papers or studies would be thankfully accepted.
I used to work at a place that used a lot of dry ice, so we played with it, a little. I used to put a chunk of it in my mouth and everybody would gasp. LOL. It was off-gassing so rapidly it insulates. Most people didn't understand it.Funny thing is the real answer is it wouldn't do anything. Liquid nitrogen takes so little energy to vaporize that you would have a hell of a time trying to even get it to slightly cool the engine. Anyone who has played with LN2 knows you can dump it on a person and it just feels like cool air to them. You'd have to immerse the entire engine into a vat of LN2 to have any kind of effect and even so I bet there would be no long term effects as long as you let it warm up again.Doh!
must.resist.the.urgeI used to work at a place that used a lot of dry ice, so we played with it, a little. I used to put a chunk of it in my mouth and everybody would gasp. LOL. It was off-gassing so rapidly it insulates. Most people didn't understand it.
must.resist.the.urge
wonder how that would cool an ......engine.must.resist.the.urge