Components of Marine Diesel Engines – Crankshaft

Written by:  • Edited by: Lamar Stonecypher
Updated Jan 20, 2009

The Crankshaft of the Marine Diesel Engine acts as the outlet of power from the engine for supply to the huge propeller immersed in the sea which helps to propel the ship forward. Learn about the construction and design of a marine crankshaft

Introduction

We learnt about the foundation of the marine diesel engines which is the bedplate in a previous article. Now we will learn about another important component namely the crankshaft. For those of you who are not well versed with engineering let me explain in a simple manner that the crankshaft is a component which converts the up and down movement of the pistons of the cylinder into continuous rotary motion which is transmitted further to move the propeller shaft in case of marine diesel engines (or transmitted to the wheels in case of automobiles).

Forces on the Crankshaft

Due to its nature of operation, there are several types of forces which come to act upon the crankshaft of engines used in marine propulsion. You will get a better idea about these forces if you take a close look at the image shown below which shows the various twisting and bending forces.

Forces on Crankshaft
click to enlarge

As can be seen from the figure, these forces are due to a variety of factors including but not limited to the weight of the pistons, combustion loads, the axial load from the propeller which is immersed in the sea, compressive loads of webs on journals and so forth.

Most of these forces have alternating patterns which gives rise to fatigue and the materials used for construction need to have substantial Ultimate Tensile Strength. Apart from that the other properties required in the material of a crankshaft are wear resistance, tensile strength, and ductility.

The material for construction also depends on the speed on the engine and slow speed marine diesel engines have crankshafts fabricated out of plain carbon steel with a percentage of carbon lying between 0.2 & 0.4%, while the alloy steels are used for engines having a relatively higher speed.

A stress diagram of a particular crankshaft would also help to show the stresses in a web fillet in a Sulzer RND 10 crankshaft as follows

Crankshaft Stress Diagram
click to enlarge

Fabrication of Crankshaft

Crankshaft manufacture is a complex and elaborate process and the exact procedure would vary with the type and size of the crankshaft under consideration but a few things would be good to know

  • Fully-built Crankshafts are those in which all the various components are shrink-fitted after separate fabrication

  • Semi-built Crankshafts are those in which several parts such as crank-throw and pins are case out of a single piece.

  • Welded Crankshafts are those in which the crank-shaft is made by welding case web crank pins and half journal units.

  • Flanged Coupling Crankshafts are made out in two pieces joined together by flanged couplings

There is a lot more to learn about marine diesel engine crankshafts which we will study in the next article such as taking crankshaft deflections.

References

Image of Forces on Crankshaft - Marine Engineering Knowledge by Brian

Image of Stresses on Crankshaft - Sanyal, D.K. (1998) Principles & Practice of Marine Diesel Engines. Mumbai: Bhandarkar Publications.


Comments

Showing all 9 comments
 
Susie Jan 13, 2012 6:07 AM
RE: Components of Marine Diesel Engines – Crankshaft
thnks
Peter Richardson Feb 23, 2011 1:16 PM
Duane
Drain oil and fuel, remove injectors, try turning engines by hand, BIG BAR may do it, turn several times, listen & feel for unusual sounds and resistance. Bet its serious if the sea water stopped them. Engine suckswater insttead of air, water does not compress like air. I have known bent con rods and broken pistons. main thing is get the sea water out the engine coz it will rust it solid.
Lamar Stonecypher Jul 2, 2010 12:35 PM
crankshaft
Hi, Zafar,

Please see Bright Hub article "Construction Materials for Marine Diesel Engines" for more information. You can find it here:

http://www.brighthub.com/engineering/marine/articles/71451.aspx

Sorry, but I can't put active URLs in comments. Please copy and paste it into your web browser.
zafar ali Jul 2, 2010 11:56 AM
crankshaft
pls can u tell me about crankshaft materials and construction of modern marine propulsion engines
Arny Dene Jun 1, 2010 5:34 AM
crankshaft deflection
good day Gents !
pls reply to me Yours comments about engine crankshaft deflections...
- what about main / general measuring of this / for what ?
- main results after measuring / total calculations:
what about (-) minus
what about (+) plus

thks and brgds
ifz Apr 5, 2010 5:10 PM
unit overhaul of a large two stroke marine engine
explain the calibration required
how to prepare for this work (overhaul)
record required for inspection
siloua ave Oct 26, 2009 2:04 AM
crankshaft deflection
when should be crankshaft deflection be taken
edo Oct 15, 2009 4:49 PM
Engine room flooded with seawater
Hi Duane,

Reading your question on internet of Oct 5th, i have the following advices.

I suppose, and hope, that after the ingress of seawater into the engine the engine was stopped at once. The longer the engine ran on that mixture of oil and water the larger the damage to the engine.

A crankshaft in operation has an average temp. of approx. 60 – 65 C. Being ingressed by cold seawater 15 C? will for not be very harmfull for the alignment.

To be sure, take an alignment check. A crankshaft out of line only occurs when the shaft was localy very hot and suddenly cooled down.

As the ship was grounded a crankshaft deflection test must be taken to be sure no distortion of the engine foundation has taken place.

You should be more concerned about the time the engine was running on that mixture of water and oil.

All lubricating oil should be discarded as the seperation of lube oil from salt is impossible.

Very important is that the whole lubricating oil systeem, (sump, filters, coolers, piping, gravitytank? and engine) is made free of water (and salt).

Check a number of main bearings (and crankpin bearings) on runningface condition. If one bearing shows excessive wear, all bearings should be checked and exchanged.

An other vulnerable engine item is the turbocharger. The exhaustgas inlet casing of the T/C got may be cracked. Take crack detection checks.

Duane Lim Oct 5, 2009 2:11 AM
Marine Engine Crankshaft Damage or Not?
Hi Ricky,

This a very helpful article. Glad to have found this on the internet. I need your expert opinion on a passenger vessel of mine that was grounded in the Philippines. After she departed from port for about 2.5 hours she was battered by huge waves and the engine room was flooded while both main & auxiliary engines were running. After a while the portside main engine stopped and then the starboard auxiliary engine stopped since it was already submerged with sea water. In your opinion are there any damage to the crankshaft of these engines because it was running hot when there was a sudden ingress of cold water? Would there be any other particular engine parts damaged also?

Thank you.

Duane
 
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