Hello Mr. Tore,
Thanks for the update... The U-Boats HP air is capable of 205 Kg/cm square and that's 2,915.79 psi which is huge. Then the pressure relief valve for the starting valve line to the lower chamber was limited to 75 Kg/cm square, or 1,066.75 psi, and it looks like this is the limit of air pressure that may be used to start the diesel engine without popping the relief valve.
Question #1. Exactly, what was the function of the relief valve? Could you over pressurize the diesel engine with the starting air valve since the bottle source could be 205 Kg/cm square?
A water stroke would happen during the very first 360 degree turning of the crank shaft when you attempt to start the diesel engine with air. The crank shaft speed would be slow and only the air pressure is driving the piston. When you turn the handle on the starting air valve, the air pressure would go from low-to-high. I would think that a water stroke would just stop the crank shaft from turning and not damage the piston, piston connecting rod, the crank shaft journals, or the crank shaft???
However, if I do the math - The piston diameter is 400 mm = 15.745 inches, so the piston surface area is 194.6 sq inches. Now, if we apply 1,066 Psi (75 Kg/cm square) of air pressure, then the total pressure could be 207,449.40 pounds on the piston top... Yep! I guess things could break...
Question #2. Mr. Tore, what usually broke?
Question #3. Was there an air pressure gauge that displayed the Starting Air pressure that was applied to start the diesel engine?
Regards,
Don_