Firstly, good on you Haufen for creating this page.
Ceci, that’s beautiful. At Orbital we used FID (flame ionization detection) instruments (Beckman and Horiba) for HC detection. Lots of explanations of these, here’s just one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJzqdzLY2KU The one in the vid is a superb example of the issue, unburnt HC’s aplenty.
This confirms the main issue with 2 strokes: unburnt HCs.
NOx levels are inherently low. These are created by high pressures and temperatures. A 4 stroke only fires every second rev, so, power for power, its pressures and temps are higher. A win for 2 strokes.
Norman suggested fuel injection after EPC. Getting the fuel into the cylinder before EPC and therefore mechanically prevent fuel loss out the exhaust was exactly what Orbital and ETEC were doing. Mind you, certainly the Orbital system injected well before EPC at high speeds and loads, but this took into account the transportation time of the fuel charge.
Neil’s pursuance of the OP principle is sound, essentially putting the fuel charge into the working chamber some distance away from the exhaust port(s).
The goal of getting 2 strokes to be clean is to complete the combustion process within the engine, not in the exhaust or never.….
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.”
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