The Ryger engine. Looking at the patents and drawing, if they are the actual patents that apply to what everyone is talking about and what Frits drove (see
http://worldwide.espacenet.com/publi...C&locale=en_EP ), I can see lots of complexities. However it may turn out to be a real gun, a lot simpler and be the answer to the next advancement of 2 strokes. Time will tell.
To me, one of the attractions of the 2 stroke is its basic simplicity, the major cyclic moving parts being the piston, rod and crank. OK, we can also have the rotary valve, reed valve and even injectors, but the primary basics are those three items. So sticking with that theme, I reckon a step forward might be to provide an inlet that bypasses the crankcase. The inlet drawing directly from atmosphere and discharging into the cylinder, in place of a regular transfer port.
The pics tell the story. What you see is a set of rubberies from a TM KZ10B cylinder, fairly accurately located onto a steel mandrel, its surface representing the actual bore.
In this case the standard B passage is screwed around a bit, presumably to clear the cylinder base studs and nuts and necessary material around there. From memory the RSA passages are seemingly a bit more direct.
Also shown is the suggested inlet passage, in place of the regular B passage. A bit arbitrary in its design, but the principle is clear. It is shown as being throttled. The concept being that the throttle would be closed until the engine speed and load are up there such that the exhaust is working and has the capacity to draw air or air/fuel directly in, bypassing the crankcase. Up to that point, the engine would be running only on the A and C ports. Alternative versions could use a diversion valve in the passage, switching from the regular B passage to the direct inlet.
Would it be better? Who knows, the main advantage I see it that it won’t see any pressure drop and volume constraints associated with coming thru the crankcase and also nice cool air direct from the world.
Issues? Tons. If it was drawing in air only, would that air have sufficient time to mix with the compensated over-rich mixture coming in from the A & C ports. Managing the transition might be interesting, but less so if they were carburetted or injected. Dunno if it would get by the CIK homologation stuff, even if it still had the single Ø30 mm obligatory carb.
Power, how about 75 hp and 17500 rpm? Dream on baby!






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