Thanks Frits, I might just do that.
Thanks Frits, I might just do that.
Air cooled engines are fuel cooled as well. A well placed injector would be fair sport and good for LE Brg lube.
Don't you look at my accountant.
He's the only one I've got.
all my handpieces (even the new one) use a foredom flexshaft sr series motor with foot pedal speed control. its very powerful and has forward/reverse. i use reverse nearly as much as forward and for that reason i wouldnt even consider owning a motor without reverse. also i have a few reverse spiral carbide bits which i use frequently.
i havent bought much from cc, just the new 90 handpiece and 3 or 4 of the bits. everything else was bought at other places. the two straight handpieces are foredom, the larger 90 is from germany and fully servicable as it can be taken apart and bearings oiled and bevel gears greased. the new 90 is supposed to be a sealed unit with no further lubrication needed but obviously it can be taken apart if you wanted. when its worn out i suppose you send it back to nakanishi for a replacement of the bevel gears and bearings. since this stuff is just a hobby for me its unlikely ill wear out any of these tools anytime soon. some of them ive had for several years and they still work like new. if you go with high qaulity stuff it will last many years
while im thinking of it, whats everyones preference for texture on the walls ? ive heard alot of various opinion on this subject, mostly from noobs that dont know much, so i figured i would ask the experts here. ive always just used the carbides and pretty much left that texture on the walls but maybe theres something better ?
That is pretty much what I have been trying to achieve with the upwards directed injection stream from the central injector.
![]()
The central injector is aimed at the underside of the piston crown through a slot in the piston. If I have to replace the main outside transfer injectors because of time considerations with a larger single one in the inlet port I will still try and retain this smaller center injector in the rear transfer port.
You would need fuel injection BUT constant flow type NOT pulsed. I think an electronicly controled constant flow in the inlet might be the way, if using the transfer ports to throttle.
Or maybe six pulsed transfer port injectors? With a power jet type thingy in the inlet at full throttle?
A Piezo injector may be the answer to the problem of only having a very limited time window available for the injection cycle at 14,000rpm on a 2T because ""a piezo actuator acts up to 5 times faster than a standard injector solenoid "" http://www.dieselhub.com/tech/piezo-injectors.html and are currently used on diesels so they can have several injection events in quick sucesion. Increasingly common on diesels but I have not been able to find any petrol ones I could buy yet.
http://www.germanautocenter.com/blog...n-german-cars/ "With the advent of piezo injectors, engine developers can now inject fuel into a cylinder’s combustion chamber in just 0.2 milliseconds." at 0.2ms they are a whole lot faster than the 2ms minimum on time injectors I have now.
Smitty without an h this is all I could find.
http://quincylooperracing.us/subpage112.html
6
4
Fath
![]()
![]()
Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
Look at those nice drum valve throttles.
American tether car racing http://www.amrca.com/
Jennings 2T tuners Handbook. http://www.amrca.com/tech/tuners.pdf
Lots of interesting little 2T & 4T handmade motors http://www.onthewire.co.uk/epitbx3.htm
As long as that tract is not as short as it could be, I will call it long.
and don't tell you won't be able to get to that top disk cover bolt
.
Where else? Imagine that you are in a test cabin and the total air entrance to the cabin is a 24 mm orifice. You can be sure that the air flow through that orifice will be 24/7, not just 220° out of every 360 crankshaft-degrees. That's 60% better...this time the 24mm orifice will be on the plenum inlet.
It can be, but this will inevitably mean that there will be circumstances where the resonance works against the engine rather than with it.Previous experience with the plenum has suggested that the plenums resonance can be adjusted
With EFI you don't need to worry about fuel dropping out of the mixture due to too low a flow velocity, so make that plenum a big as you can; think Samsonite.
If a carburettor has one advantage over fuel injection, this is it.
When the quantity of fuel is controlled via the open/shut time of an injector, it is practically impossible to create a homogeneous mixture at the injector. And I'm not even talking about vaporized fuel here; I'm just talking about every part of air getting the same number of fuel droplets.
Fortunately for us much of the necessary homogenisation takes place in a two-stroke's crankcase, with the con rod stirring things up and transferring its heat to the yet-unvaporized fuel droplets. But with direct fuel injection you loose this advantage, and the con rod bearing looses most of its cooling.
Keep it simple, Neil. Spraying a constant flow of fuel in the inlet will do fine. I've been doing some work on 6,5 cc engines (google F3D and MB40) and since those little bastards rev to 36.000 there was no chance in hell that I would find injectors small enough and fast enough, so I designed a constant-flow injection; really simple, with an electric motor driving a gear pump and a spring-loaded conical-seat injector that would open according to the pump yield.
The pump is no problem: they are readily available for people building there own miniature jet engines. Controlling the pump rpm was less easy because the motor that comes with the pump, simply won't run slowly enough. Those litte jet engines are real guzzlers, even compared to a two-stroke, and the motor's stall rpm would still drown our piston engine while we were trying to start it.
Stepper motors were out because their bearings could not handle the gyroscopic forces in an F3D-airplane cornering at over 40g, and because stepper motors can miss steps without giving any feedback other than the engine running too lean. So I had to pulse-width-modulate the original pump motor in order to keep it running at a low, but to all intents and purposes regular rpm. I tried to measure its rpm by having a Hall sensor look at the teeth of the pump gears, but the teeth were so fine that the sensor couldn't distinguish them. The solution was to drill a small number (say 4) holes in the gear flank and have a Hall sensor look at those.
This is where the project came to a halt because of other, more pressing activities. But it may give you something to go by.
hey wobbly i been changing up the numbers alittle on engmod for a bit more power and rpm on this yami engine. first order of business is sorting out the intake area which needs to be bigger. the 2 main windows are fairly tall now but could be made taller still if need be. however i was thinking it would be better to try and gain as much of the extra area from enlarging the boyesens, then if the total intake area is still a bit small i can raise the main windows further as needed. what do you think ?
reason for my thinking is because it will put more of the intake area down lower near bdc, rather than sky jacking the main windows. plus the larger boyesens would help fill up the transfers faster. maybe im wrong here but this seems to make the most sense to me
LOL ... English is a funny thing ... I meant that the 24mm restriction that can currently be seen in the inlet tract of the Flettner ball valve will be re located to the plenum inlet. In the plenum configuration the 24mm restriction has always been in the plenum inlet. 24/7 flow through the regulation 24mm restriction was the whole point of the plenum concept.
EngMod2T suggests 3L is a good size for the plenum, 2L is minimum. Currently its 1L and when I tried it, it gave a significant boost to the lower part of the torque curve but the higher rpm part of the curve was suppressed. That gave me the idea that a variable plenum volume could be very useful too and with the Suzuki GP cases that would be reasonably easy to do.
Yes, its way better to enlarge the Boyesens as they dont have any flow disruption from the piston.
There is plenty of room to cut away the floor and angle the flow down into the transfer duct feed area in the case.
Example of Cheetah cylinder, the Boyesens are 25 high by 14 wide.
Ive got a thing thats unique and new.To prove it I'll have the last laugh on you.Cause instead of one head I got two.And you know two heads are better than one.
There are currently 7 users browsing this thread. (1 members and 6 guests)
Bookmarks