Weird Harold wrote:Dutch46 wrote:I think you need to take a closer look at what is required to keep a triple expansion engine running. The vaunted reliability of steam stems largely from redundancy and not from the reliability of the multitude of its separate parts.
I don't recall anyone claiming reliability as an advantage for steam power. One reason ICEs took over so completely is the maintenance to operations ratio for steam is so costly. Steam engines can take all day to raise steam, require constant oiling and monitoring, and a host of other tasks to start up or shut down.
What Steam engines offer is maintainability: A decent blacksmith can rebuild almost any part needed.
Steam also offers versatility: external combustion means the boiler can be fired by solid, liquid, or gaseous fuel; everything from buffalo chips to cow farts can fuel a steam engine. (some fuels are obviously better than others. )
In Safehold's case, Steam also can pass the inquisition -- at least a Charisian inquisition.
Steam isn't a permanent solution, but it can fill the gaps until the Go4 is defeated and the Proscriptions can be lifted.
A diesel will run on anything that combusts at the temperature that the compression generates. The only problem is getting it into the cylinder at the right time and in the right quantity. There have been diesels that have been run on dried sewage solids. Boilers have a number of drawbacks for mobile applications such as trucks that make diesel propulsion preferable. for stationary applications, steam is fine.