Westport Innovations

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Westport Fuel Systems
Industrytechnology
Founded1980s
Headquarters
Vancouver, British Columbia
, Canada
Area served
France
Sweden
Italy
China
Australia
United States

Westport Innovations (

Vancouver, British Columbia
, Canada, where the company was founded, Westport also has facilities in France, Sweden, Italy, China, Australia and the United States.

Westport is best known for its technology that allows the diesel engine to operate on natural gas without modifications to the engine's combustion chamber.[1]

History

In the early 1980s Philip Hill, then a

atmospheric particulate matter. At the same time, he wanted to preserve the performance, fuel economy
, durability and reliability characteristics of the traditional diesel engine.

With funding limited and finding few suitable commercial components or testing equipment, Hill and his team designed and fabricated their own components and equipment. The theoretical results they obtained from their research and experimentation was a significant factor in the later development of Westport.[2]

By injecting a small amount of diesel fuel before a main, high-pressure, direct injection (HPDI) of natural gas to start the combustion, Hill was able to successfully retain important characteristics of the diesel engine.[2] In 1994, through UBC's University-Industry Liaison Office, Hill met David Demers, who later became Westport's CEO. In 1995 the two founded Westport Innovations Inc. to capitalize on the HPDI technology.[1]

Milestones

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Waddell, Nick (2 August 2011). "Could BC Become the Next Cleantech Mecca?". Cantech Letter.
  2. ^ a b "Dr. Phil Hill wins Manning Award".
  3. ^ "Cummins Westport revamps joint venture".
  4. ^ "Westport snags Italian maker of fuel systems". Retrieved 2020-04-29.
  5. ^ Diane Cardwell; Clifford Krauss (April 22, 2013). "Trucking Industry Is Set to Expand Its Use of Natural Gas". The New York Times. Retrieved April 23, 2013.

External links