iranuke wrote:The discussion about the proscriptions regarding diesel and steam is fascinating. What I want to know is from the standpoint of the uneducated layman, what precisely is the difference when you shoot a rifle and when you inject fuel into the cylinder of a diesel engine? Yes the rifle bullet reaches out to touch someone, and the energy from the diesel is captures by the crankshaft, but from the layman's perspective, what is the difference.
A couple of differences:
1: Gunpowder is a solid propellent. Diesels can run on finely powdered solid fuels, but there's never been a successful design put into general usage.
2: A Bullet is not contained, and a piston is. A bullet destroys something when it hits, (a piston does also if it escapes from the cylinder.)
If Charis were to develop firearms that use liquid propellent or even better, a fuel-air propellent, then a connection might be made between firearms and Diesels. In the meantime, there is a perception of gunpowder as an explosive and a connection with destruction. Not an ideal starting point for conceptualization of ICE function.