
Originally Posted by
Motu
.....the large surface area of the piston applying a lot of pressure,a short sharp shock giving more torque.....

Originally Posted by
Ixion
But I don't think the hydraulic analogy is valid. Sure, there is a bigger poiston area. But the VOLUME of gas is the same (all other things being equal, which they never are), so the bigger piston area implies a lower pressure per square inch .
I tend to agree with Ixion - pressure if force / area i.e. more surface area (bigger piston) = less pressure

Originally Posted by
Ixion
What somewhat confuses this argument is that bore and stroke can seldom be considered in isolation.....
......The old long stroke singles, f'instance, ALSO had very small valve areas. mainly for the sake of fuel economy.

Originally Posted by
Motu
Do I have to mention trials bikes again? One clue is high intake gas speed....small ports,small valves,small carbs,small exhausts.Like Ixion says,move the torque curve down.
Your both make a good point - stroke and bore are only part of part of the equation. As I understand it high gas speeds (due to small carbies and or small valves) results in better air/fuel mixing hence better combustion pressures and less emissions. The 'restrictions' mean that the engines cannot flow enough air for high rpms though.
So we now have (warning this may be complete shite!)
- long stroke motors with small valves, due to bore dimensions, relative to capacity with high torque. They have to have high fly wheel inertia to get though the stroke which means they dont spool up very fast though are good luggers. Low power as cant pull high revs.
- short stroke motors with small valves, relative to capacity with high torque. They have low fly wheel inertia (don't need it to get through the stroke) so the spool up well. Low power as cant pull high revs as cannot flow enough air to pull the rpm.
- short stroke motor with large valves, relative to capacity with low torque due to low gas speeds hence poor combustion at low rpm, and yet high power as can pull high rpm.
So what we want is a short stroke with low inertial fly wheel and with a variable 'restriction' of sorts to keep gas flow speeds up at low rpms and yet can open up at high rpm to flow enough gas?
Am I about 1/2 right????
Cheers R
P.S. fly wheel inertia is the key not weight.
Edit - Damn it - course it they had to add more stuff - stop being so bloody technical I and M
"The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools." - Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
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