A few things about this post:
Firstly, I've not seen more than 2-3 posters here with genuine understanding of petrol and diesel engines. Too much petrolhead bashing diesels crap in the air.
Secondly, there is still no way to directly compare diesels and petrols even today. This is simply a function of technological history. Petrols had more than a century of incremental developments vs disesels. Automotive diesels used in 4x4s, sedans, etc have remained underdeveloped until the past decade or so. The fact that Common-rail/DDI diesels are such recent inventions proves this.
FYI, GDI (direct petrol injction) is aleready in existance for about a decade (Mitsubishi GDI in Pajeros being the best example). Yes, the 3.5L GDI Pajero engines are about 10% more power and torque and 30% less emmsions than a mechanically equivilant MPI(Multi-point injection) engine. But the real jump is the diesel.
Example:
Mitsubishi Motors Diesel 4D56
-2477cc
The original 4D56 had
147nm@2500 and
72ps@4200, 4700 redline.
The turbo-intercooled of the 4D56 had about
200nm@2000 and
99ps@4000, 4500 redline.
The latest iteration of the 4D56 is built on the same fundamental engine block design turbo-intercooled with the addition of Hyper Common-Rail Injection and DOHC in place of the old SOHC head. The result:
136ps@4000 and
314nm@2000, 4500 redline. 11.8L/100km in URBAN driving mode in a 1890kg kerb weight pick-up truck (new L200 or Triton, depending on the market).
Or one could opt for the power upgrade pack for over 160ps, all while complyig with EU-4 emmison standards.
Note that the basic engine block design and capcity have remained unchanged. And believe me, I've tried the original 72ps engine. though underpowered, it has absolutely no hestitation to rev towards its 4700rpm redline. With turbo-intercooler, high pressure fuel injection and DOHC, itwould obviously rev even better.
Note that diesels are practically more efficient since they run at maximum intake airflow almost continuously, so the only mechanism for rev and power output control is rate of fuel intake. As long as the A/F ratio remians greater than stoichometric, diesel efficiency is always superior to petrol. For diesels, fule consumption is much more directly related to power output.
Also note that turbo petrols are forced to run low compression ratios, which again kills effieciecy. Petrol turbo engines need to run rich all the time to avoid detonation. Diesels actually improve in efficiency with forced induction, since more air only means leaner A/F ratio if fuel intake rate remains static. Or one could simply maintain A/F ratio and enjoy greater performance with no loss in fuel-power efficiency. Try that with a petrol engine and you'll detonate the engine to smitherines.
In lay man terms, diesels get all the benefits of turbos and none of the conmy tradeoffs, a win-win deal. Petrols are heavily compromised in this respect. The fact that diesel blocks and internals are much stronger than their petrol counterparts only ensures superior reliability. in fact, some diesels don't break in completely until over 100,000km.
From the emmisions point, even the oldest NA 4D56 won't smoke or smell, except on cold starts. Note it doesn't even use a soot filter. The smoky diesel syndrome petrolheads blaber about are just the result the result of poor maintainance and injection settings. people are notorious for skipping oil and filter changes and other routine service. I've tried to get a warmed up NA 4D56 to smoke at full throttle at redline (4700rpm). No luck.
Conclusion: Diesels are at the infancy of their development and their superiority over petrol is a technological inevitability.
And please, informed replys only. This is an LFS (aka hardcore sim) forum, not NFS:Most wanted/Underground. Last thing we need is underinformed opinions to ruin the realist atmosphere of LFS.
Hope this helps everyone.