Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Power Science

The British Steam Car Challenge 184

Van Cutter Romney sends us word of a British steam-powered car that will attempt to set a world record speed of 200 mph. The car, constructed on a tubular chassis, holds four boilers that deliver four megawatts of power, producing 300 bhp. The current record of 127.659 mph was established in 1906. More photos and specs at the Steam Car Club of Great Britain's site.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The British Steam Car Challenge

Comments Filter:
  • by dotpavan ( 829804 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:22PM (#19642853) Homepage
    that this car is "hot"? would I be ensured a "steamy ride" on this? :)
    • 4 MW Rock Lobster. (Score:3, Interesting)

      by twitter ( 104583 )

      Motive power is from a two-stage steam turbine, fed by a boiler fired on LPG. ... The boiler section is in the centre of the car directly behind the single seat cockpit. ... with a bulkhead between the driver and the powertrain.

      Ah yes, the very important bulkhead between driver and 4MW of blue blazes and steam. Steam turbine powered craft do better on an ocean of cooling material or fixed next to a very large body of water. Launching one at 200 MPH on land is, well, crazy.

      • Ah yes, the very important bulkhead between driver and 4MW of blue blazes and steam. Steam turbine powered craft do better on an ocean of cooling material or fixed next to a very large body of water. Launching one at 200 MPH on land is, well, crazy.

        And inefficient. With 4MW in and 300 bhp out, I make that out to be about 5.6% efficient. Considering that steam-powered gensets can hit 30-35% efficiency easily, and that fuel is getting increasingly rare, this reeks of bad idea.

        • And inefficient. With 4MW in and 300 bhp out, I make that out to be about 5.6% efficient. Considering that steam-powered gensets can hit 30-35% efficiency easily, and that fuel is getting increasingly rare, this reeks of bad idea.

          They're trying to break a speed record. I don't think they intend to start mass producing these as a solution to the world's environmental problems. The all time land speed record was set by a vehicle that got 0.04mpg using 4.8Gal/sec of fuel [wikipedia.org]. I can't find the actual efficienc

  • Vaporware (Score:5, Funny)

    by TodMinuit ( 1026042 ) <todminuitNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:23PM (#19642863)
    I bet this turns out to be nothing but a bunch of hot air!
  • Oh...wait.

    Nevermind.

  • 4MW? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mastershake_phd ( 1050150 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:27PM (#19642907) Homepage
    4 mega watts? You could power a small town with that.
    • Re:4MW? (Score:5, Funny)

      by jimbug ( 1119529 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:29PM (#19642921)
      orrrrrrrr you could drive really fast! Which is a better use of power?
    • Well, even more jarring is:
      he car gets 300bhp (which equals about 220kW) out of those 4 MW.

      Just about 5 percent efficiency (compared to well over 25 for gasoline/Diesel/LPG internal combustion cars) show quite well why steam engines are obsolete.
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by DuckDodgers ( 541817 )
        This is a one-off car set to break a performance record, not an attempt at an efficient mass production vehicle.

        Read wikipedia. Steam cars died primarily because they were high maintenance and required several minutes' time to build steam before they could move. Internal combustion engines had a lower risk of rust or damage from freezing and could be started and driven immediately. Inconvenience killed the steam car, not inefficiency.
        • In the UK what killed off steam vehicles was axle weight restrictions, obviously a steam car is going to be much heavier than a petrol machine.

          But these days in the UK you can drive a steam car without paying road tax, which for enthusiasts is a good thing.

          The price of steam rollers and machinery is very high now due to popularity of the hobby, there's quite a few steam rallys around.
      • Re:4MW? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by JesseL ( 107722 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @11:41PM (#19645183) Homepage Journal
        Steam engines are obsolete? WTF?

        How do you get electricity out of your nuclear power plant?
        • Re:4MW? (Score:4, Funny)

          by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2007 @07:31AM (#19647747)
          "How do you get electricity out of your nuclear power plant?"

          Photovoltaic cells

          (The fusion reactor is a a safe distance of 93 million miles)
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by pclminion ( 145572 )
      4 megawatts is a little over 5000 horsepower. Hell, a funny car [wikipedia.org] produces almost 3000 horse more than that. Don't be awed by the word "mega." And comparisons to electrical consumption aren't very relevant anyway.
    • Something's not quite right. 4Mw - 5361 horsepower.

      This just might win the award for least efficient energy conversion. Of course, using LPG to fire boilers to run a steam engine is only considerably less efficient running an internal combustion engine on LPG and using *that* to drive the wheels ;-)

      But - I guess the objective here isn't efficiency, it's setting a world record with a steam powered car.
  • Damned inefficient (Score:4, Informative)

    by overshoot ( 39700 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:29PM (#19642931)
    Four megawatts turning into 300 bhp?

    Should be well over 4000 bhp, since one bhp is 746 watts. Looks like an amazing amount of conversion loss there.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by xero314 ( 722674 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:21PM (#19643425)

        The IC engine is far more efficient in comparison.
        If Internal Combustion is so much more efficient why is the vast majority of energy produced on earth is converted to electricity through turbines rather than internal combustion driven generators? Gas turbine engines have been produced with a energy conversion efficiency of 46%, as compared to ICs which have reached 42% (both maximums taken from working models not theoretical). It is also easier to addapt heat recovery systems to turbine engines than it is to internal combustion. Now multi stage steam turbines actually surpass Both the IC and the Gass turbine and are capable of reaching 95% isentropic efficiency. I just think you are missing some factors in your efficiency equation.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by imsabbel ( 611519 )
          Maybe because steam engines arent turbines?
          You know, Rankine cyle vs Brayton cycle....
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by xero314 ( 722674 )

            Maybe because steam engines arent turbines?

            That's interesting since what we are discussing here is a specific entry in the British Steam Car Challenge who's "Motive power is from a two-stage steam turbine [which] drives a gear train with a 5:1 ratio for a wheel speed of 3000 RPM at 200 MPH". Now since you were responding another post which was a comment on the output of the aforementioned turbine powered car, and there was no reference to "steam engine" made until you last post, would you like to go an RFTA and then get back to us?

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Maybe because steam engines arent turbines?

            Not true.

            The Pennsylvania Railroad built a hugely powerful steam turbine locomotive [wikipedia.org], and there were others as well. 6900 HP is HUGE for a single steamer, but that much HP is usually only needed for freight trains, and PRR's monster was terribly inefficent below 40 MPH, and most freight trains spend a large portion of their time running slower than that. Also diesel-electrics were starting to come online, which are much more efficient at slower speeds (about 25 MPH is the most efficient speed for a diesel

        • Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @09:14PM (#19643921)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by xero314 ( 722674 )

            The IC engine was developed as a replacement for steam powered piston locomotion and paddle wheel boating (think river boats on the Mississippi)...But if you think running a steam turbine in an automobile is far more efficient than an IC, you're mistaken

            That's a much better comment that the previous one I was responding too. The car under discussion is powered by a two stage turbine engine, not a steam piston and there for pointing out the history or efficiency of the steam piston engine is moot. Regardless to any of that, my original statement still stands, that stating IC is more efficient that steam is a gross generalization, since you even back that up by stating you were comparing a subset of steam power converters to general Internal Combustion.

          • We don't have heat recovery technolgy that scales down small enough to be as effective as the ones running our power plants
            I wonder if it could scale down as far as a locomotive. I'd be interested in seeing a diesel/steam train in action and compare that to the diesel/electric combinations we have today.
        • Comparing a ground based turbine set up to a mobile IC is a bit off.

          A steam plant on the ground actually spins, in the US, at a constant 60rpms when all is said done, that's how we get power at 60hz. In fact, one of the little known things about the power grid is that demand on the grid can actually "pull" on the generators, turning them into motors or slowing them down. In extreme cases, it is possible to physically damage the generator. Tales of bent shafts due to fluctuations in demand are common.

          It sh
          • Water tube boilers http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water-tube_boiler [wikipedia.org] heat quickly, are fairly light weight, and can be immune to catastrophic explosions by design. However, that isn't enough to overcome the many disadvantages of steam that you pointed out.
          • by xero314 ( 722674 )
            Not to detract from you post but it is possible, and common to have sealed system steam turbines. There is no need to replace the water in a sealed system. Water can be heated, there by converted into steam, which produces pressure which forces the steam through a turbine. When the stored energy of the steam is exchanged by the turbine it cools and re-liquifies. The most efficient systems would actually keep the steam in the turbine stages until fully condensed, an there for have 0 waste water.
      • by spaceyhackerlady ( 462530 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:26PM (#19643479)

        Precisely why the internal combustion engine was developed. The IC engine is far more efficient in comparison.

        Back in Ye Olden Tymes (TM), it wasn't at all clear how those newfangled horseless carriages were going to be powered. There were electric ones, steam ones, and gasoline powered ones. Steam was a mature technology and well-understood, electric was silent but had range issues, and gasoline was just plain dangerous. Steam was the initial leader. Henry Ford selected gasoline for his Model T, and the rest was history.

        With fossil fuels, greenhouse gases and all that, it doesn't matter how efficient gasoline engines are, if what they run on is too expensive to be practical. Sure, steam engines have thermodynamic limits. But they also have very nice emissions qualities, and excellent torque characteristics. I'd be very interested in seeing what a modern steam car could do.

        The gasoline engine car makers actually ran FUD ads about how dangerous electric cars were. They were so quiet that you couldn't hear them coming, and risked getting run over!

        ...laura

        • by the_weasel ( 323320 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:39PM (#19643599) Homepage
          Yep. Damn silence used to blanket the world like a fog. Thank god modern progress has defeated the awful quiet. We have driven it away with beeps, honks, bangs, rings and clashes. I don't know how I would sleep without the gentle lullaby of the cooling fans....

          Sarcasm naturally (it is my specialty!).

          If I had a sniper rifle, every last son of a bitch with a Harley modded for sound would have it shot out from under them as they rounded the corner to my house. I don't accept the "It's so other cars can hear me coming" excuse either. I have been riding motorcycles for decades, and the best way to do that is to drive like everyone around you is out to get you.

          We have allowed our world to become polluted with more than just chemicals - we let the noise in too. I am willing to bet it has as much an impact on our long term health.

          [RANT OFF]
          • by Eivind ( 15695 )

            Sure noise has a strong negative influence on health, this is very well established and not controversial in the least.

            Prolonged exposure to noise causes increase in aggression, elevated blood-pressure, increased risk of tinnitus (which again often leads to depression and/or anxiety), and increased risk of heart and circulatory problems, besides the obvious one of hearing-loss if the noise-levels are very high.

            Noise in your rest-periods is the most damaging, and sudden unexpected noises are worse than c

          • by peterpi ( 585134 )
            I hope you'd use a silencer. Those son-of-a-bitch gun enthusiasts, tsk!
          • If I had a sniper rifle, every last son of a bitch with a Harley modded for sound would have it shot out from under them as they rounded the corner to my house.

            I know a woman named Mercedes who, last I checked, rode a Honda or something. Her response to "loud pipes save lives" is "why don't you just tape down the horn button then?"

            Harleys are the biggest festering piece of shit bikes on the road. They have no torque and get super shit mileage compared to even the most powerful imports. It's too bad they d

        • Precisely why the internal combustion engine was developed. The IC engine is far more efficient in comparison.

          Back in Ye Olden Tymes (TM), it wasn't at all clear how those newfangled horseless carriages were going to be powered. There were electric ones, steam ones, and gasoline powered ones. Steam was a mature technology and well-understood, electric was silent but had range issues, and gasoline was just plain dangerous. Steam was the initial leader. Henry Ford selected gasoline for his Model T, and the r

          • by spaceyhackerlady ( 462530 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2007 @12:54AM (#19645711)

            It's important however to understand *why* gasoline won out however. External combustion cars required anywhere from half an hour upwards before they were ready to creep, and required considerable maintenance. Internal combustion cars were ready to go within a few minutes and required much less maintenance.

            Yup. That advantage came with the development of kettering ignition. Prior to that most internal combustion engines used glow ignition, where you had to heat the external part of the ignition system with a blowtorch until it was hot enough. The same sort of system is still used in model airplane engines, but their electric glow plugs make them a lot easier to start.

            The local electric car club [veva.bc.ca] have a 1912 Detroit [veva.bc.ca], albeit with modern lead-acid batteries replacing the original Edison cells. I've ridden in it; it feels like a telephone booth on wheels. But except for a slight whirr from the driveline, it's silent. These were the cars that made people like Henry Ford nervous.

            ...laura

        • I'm sure I remember a story about the competition between steam and IC engines for trucks. The IC crowd managed to get a road tax system introduced that depended upon the weight of the vehicle. Since steam engines were far heavier at the time, it pretty much finished off steam trucks in one blow. I can't find a reference though - does anyone know, or did I make this up?
        • by Ihlosi ( 895663 )
          Steam was the initial leader. Henry Ford selected gasoline for his Model T, and the rest was history.



          Mr. Daimler and Mr. Benz are probably spinning in their graves at higher rpms than the engines in their cars ever did.

    • This looks like a mistake in the numbers. Steam turbines are extremely efficient, much more efficient than internal combustion engines. Most of the world's electricity is generated by steam turbines. The problem with steam is that you either need to condense the steam back to water, or run a total loss system. Either one is problematic for a motor vehicle.
    • by frdmfghtr ( 603968 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:03PM (#19643279)

      Should be well over 4000 bhp, since one bhp is 746 watts. Looks like an amazing amount of conversion loss there.
      I think it's more a case where not all the energy contained in the steam is used for forward motion. The last thing you want to do is extract all that energy from the steam in the turbine, since in doing so would change the steam back into water. Water and high-speed steam turbines are not a good mix, unless you want to have shards of turbine flying about.

      Instead, you extract as much energy as you can, while keeping the steam hot enough at the final turbine outlet pressure to prevent the phase change. In fact, most of the energy put into the steam (in some cases 75%) is removed AFTER the steam goes through the turbine, by way of the condensers.
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by LabRat ( 8054 )
        Well, yes and no. It's true that the majority of the thermal energy is removed after the turbine stage..but that doesn't mean that 75% of the initial energy is lost uselessly to the environment. Rather, the act of condensing the steam back into water drastically reduces the exhaust pressure and increases overall flow rate through the turbine...causing substantially more mechanical energy to be produced than would otherwise be made. The effect can be calculated quite accurately using 2nd Law analysis. It
      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by Trackster ( 761525 )
        4MW is the _capacity_ of the boilers. Chances are, they never use all that capacity. That's just the size boiler they needed to maintain a large head (charge) of steam at high output for a long time.
    • Yes, there is an amazing amount of conversion loss there. Why?
      First, on a mile long track (with maybe ten more miles to "spool up") even such a big 4MW won't use so much fuel, and so much water. As such, the cost (in mass penalties and aerodynamics of the car due to radiators) of a condensing component was ruled too great (the Doble car had such systems in the 1920s, and got 14 miles per gallon of fuel oil, for a car weighing 5500lbs).
      Second, a two stage steam tur
  • steam car dragster (Score:3, Informative)

    by secPM_MS ( 1081961 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:32PM (#19642973)
    The problem with steam engines is the condenser system, which tends to be bulky and weigh a lot. If you are going to go open cycle, an appropriate choice for a short distance racer, a high pressure system can have very high power. In such a situation you have your high power boilers fed by a high pressure pump and exiting a turbine, which is geared down to the wheels. ZOOM!
  • Pointless (Score:3, Insightful)

    by GrahamCox ( 741991 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:47PM (#19643137) Homepage
    What's the point of this? Steam reached the peak of its development for transportation in the 1920s. Thermodynamically you can't do much better than 25% efficiency and that's with all the technology you can muster. More typically you only get 10%. The focus for engineers should be transportation that doubles car efficiency to 60 - 70%. Not halves it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by The-Ixian ( 168184 )
      yes, because all of the engineers in the world were busy at work on this project for the last 10 years!
      We are now reaching the end of the development cycle and are ready to release this new, high-speed steam racer to the public.
        This will surely replace all of our current, more efficient automobiles.
    • What's the point of this?
      Because it would be cool to do...not everything has to be practical to be cool to do.
    • Where did you get the 25% figure?

      It's my understanding that steam cars died because they were inconvenient. Parts rusted, water froze and ruptured areas, and worst of all each time you wanted to use it, it had to spend a few minutes building steam.

      Is it possible that technological advances in the past 80 years would let us overcome some or all of those problems, and also improve the efficiency?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

      What's the point of this? Steam reached the peak of its development for transportation in the 1920s.

      The designers of naval powerplants would be surprised to learn this - as they were making performance and efficiency gains right up until (fossil fuel combustion) steam went out of fashion for new builds... Within the last twenty years. Word on the street is that guys over on the nuclear side of the house are still making a few improvements to the steam side of the cycle even today.

    • Lest my comment be misunderstood (and this being slashdot that's not just inevitable, it's practically compulsory) I'm talking about steam efficiency when used for automotive transportation. The best steam locomotives reached about 25% efficiency. The big problem is that efficiency is related to the temperature difference "across" the engine so you either need to get the steam really, really hot or have a cold reservoir that has a very, very high capacity. Both of these things are compromised severely in a
    • the real point is: do we need fast cars when in urban scapes you slow to a crawl? Perhaps a non-efficient, slow, non-polluting engine is better than one efficient, fast, polluting one when you're running at 18mph...
  • by Dunx ( 23729 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @07:49PM (#19643147) Homepage
    One of the stated aims is to generate excitement around alternative fuels, and yet it runs on LPG.

    Very curious.
    • Yup. The cabs in Lowell, Massachusetts back in the 80s were Dodge Darts with slant-6 internal-combustion engines converted to run on LPG. It's certainly not a new fuel, and you don't need steam engines to use it.

      A conspicuous absence from the specs is a weight figure. It makes extensive use of aluminum and carbon composites, but it also carries 4 boilers, a turbine, and nitrogen-charged water tanks. I'm really curious how that balances out. If it goes 200+MPH but weighs 5000lbs then I'm not particularl
    • Yes, LPG is fossil-based. The 'alternative fuel' moniker is because it's a by-product you get (free, more or less) when refining natural gas or crude oil.
  • Yeah! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Silverlock ( 36154 )
    Like, totally tubular, man!
  • As others have stated this thing is really inefficient. My question is, they are using these boilers to drive a turbine. Isn't this how coal fired power plants operate as well? coal heats boiler, steam drives turbine? Nuclear plants as well, just a different fuel. What about natural gas plants? I don't know, do they drive the turbine directly with a natural gas ICE? or do they heat a boiler as well?

    My point is, are all steam driven turbines this inefficient? And if so, wouldn't increasing the efficienc
    • by TopSpin ( 753 ) *
      What about natural gas plants?

      Both. Some plants drive turbines directly. This is the case with plants that supplement base power generation during peaks. They start very rapidly to match demand and range in size from small emergency units to turbines the size of a small house. Others are indirect. In some cases gas is used in the same plant with coal. There are a wide variety of configurations for turning fossil fuels into electricity and gas (LPG, NG, etc.) is very flexible.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Mspangler ( 770054 )
      The smaller the steam turbine, the less efficient it is.
      If you put 9 or 10 stages in series, boost the diameter, and lower the ideal blade speed, they get much more efficient. Also, there are special low-pressure turbine designs that you can put on after the high-pressure turbines. Then you can add reheat stages, where you take out the no longer superheated, but still pretty high pressure steam, resuperheat it, then put back into the same or another turbine.

      The turbine(s) now fill a building, or th
  • The article doesn't mention megawatts at all, so that seems to be typical 'Slashdot Editorial Liberty'. However, in order to bring the water to a boil in a reasonable time, it can probably burn at a megawatt rate at startup.
    • by Duhavid ( 677874 )
      The first link:

      "This is the Inspiration, the British steam powered car that is attempting to take the British and World land speed records (for steam vehicles). The car is constructed on a tubular steel chassis and holds four boilers which output a massive four megawatts."

      Now, perhaps there was a edit adding that link,
      but there it is.
  • by stimpleton ( 732392 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @08:54PM (#19643737)
    "The current record of 127.659 mph was established in 1906"

    Actually, from TFA, the accepted speed was 121.57mph over one kilometer.

    Regardless, I am very, very impressed by the above.

    With the advent of better machining, lighter materials, and vastly better bearing and bushing technology etc of today, this makes the 1906 record all the more incredible.

    I am going to make a fairly spectacular statement. This small team, in 1906, was as clever as the 14 person combined team that is doing the current days project.
    • by hey! ( 33014 )
      What's really impressive is how quickly the speed record moved upward over a few short years.

      There's nothing like an infusion of brain power and capital for getting a problem solved, I guess. Hopefully, we'll see similar advances in electric vehicle technology over the next several years, now that we're near global peak oil production.
  • by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@@@gmail...com> on Monday June 25, 2007 @09:02PM (#19643815) Homepage
    It's interesting all the people they list at the end with their credentials. However, someone with experience at designing high capacity high pressure boilers is noteable by his absence from the list. (The heat exchangers listed in one fellow's brief biography are almost, but not quite the same thing.)
     
    One of the pictures [steamcar.net] on another page [steamcar.net] shows the water becoming superheated steam inside one of the boilers - seemingly in the last of the four boilers. Though much depends on the exact layout of the tubes in their boiler, normally superheaters are behind a wall of other tubes. It is very easy to overheat a superheater - leading to tube failure.
     
    But most interestingly - there is no steam seperator between the water tubes and the superheater. This will make it easier (trivial in fact) for a slug of water to reach the turbine if things go pear shaped.
    • It's the "Steam Car Club of Great Britain". To misquote the Bishop of Southwark, "it's what they do".

      Seriously, boiler regs in the UK are very strict, even for vehicles that will get nowhere near a public road. I'm sure that the health-and -safety police will have been all over it.
  • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @09:25PM (#19644027)
    4 megawatts is 5.2 THOUSAND horsepower. If the turbine were 28% efficient, should be over a 1,400 bhp car.
  • by owlnation ( 858981 ) on Monday June 25, 2007 @10:43PM (#19644653)
    As one who adores steampunk, I'm extremely disappointed to find that this car looks positively modern and computer designed.

    Of course I understand they are trying to break records and aerodynamics is a factor, but surely a few pipes, wrought iron and wood paneling wouldn't hurt too much? Fast it may be, but desirable? Nay sir, I fear this contraption is not for gentlemen.
    • by British ( 51765 )
      Not only that, there's no guys with handlebar mustaches, top hats, and Thomas Dolby goggles.

      Why is this a web page? Why not some French-made turn of the century poster?
  • by PenGun ( 794213 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2007 @12:46AM (#19645643) Homepage
    Max torque ... 0 RPM. The Stanley Steamers used to be able to put one wheel on a phone pole and drive up it a few feet.
  • Is this just for fun or what?
    I fear that steam technology is now a tittle bit out of the industry focus.
  • With four boilers that means you can enjoy four different pots of tea while driving 200mph.


    Tea. Earl Grey. Hot. Engage.

  • TFWiredA states that "Britain has no official record, so just by turning up they win."

    It's not exactly that easy. In order to claim a British record, they'll have to undergo all sorts of safety checks, do the runs under recorded conditions in the presence of an official timer, probably turn the car round and do another run the other way. It's not as simple as just claiming a record.

    Unfortunately, it's so much of a faff that I doubt they'll bother. Similarly, the JCB Dieselmax [wikipedia.org] broke the British diesel spe

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

Working...