What ifthis wasn't such a silly idea, ring in the cylinder wall just above the exhaust port, with the piston moving in and out of it. If the ring was secured in such a way that it only just touched the piston (piston has a small radius on top) and sealed when gas pressure is applied. No more ring flutter even up to 30000, piston with some sort of wear resistance coating. You could possibly run two rings one on top of the other with the gaps 180 degrees apart. Under the ring there is no need for bridges at all just large holes. Remember the piston is guided so it does not touch the bore.
Now we are getting under the influence, what if , Lets say the transfers do have one way reeds (magic ones that can handle heat and pressure) , could the transfers be indeed above the exhaust as Husa suggested, expansion down to large low exhaust annular cavity ( no bridges just a large cut away all around the bore connected to the exhaust outlet), So transfer has now taken place up into the upper part of the cylinder and if pressures are right can keep transfering untill the piston shuts these ports off. If the exhaust pressure was kept high leakage from the upper part of the cylinder into the lower exhaust annular cavity would be minimal???
Another bed time story
"Don't let the piston touch the rings"
The bore rings described above assumes the piston touches them which we're told they don't![]()
Ken, you might like to know that you gave Harry a good scare! For some reason, although he is logged in, he can't see the pictures here. So he could not see the way you were pulling his leg; all he saw was your disturbing text about another competitor.
Mental Trousers, are you there? I promised Harry to bring his problem to your attention. He logs in which seems to work because he gets the message "welcome Ryger" or words to that effect, but he cannot see any pictures and he cannot post anything. The two-stroke world is depending on you, Shane!
Thanks Grumph. My own fault really because I tend to hush those birthdays up. And my pleasure re the info etc.
Kel, before you do that, take a look at the calculation of the elliptical port shape, necessary to keep the piston ring alive, that I posted here somewhere.
Your very large B-ports will require very generous corner radii and there may not be sufficient material to realize that.
Fuel is an oil, a real thin oil but it will lube a ring. Look at a fourstroke the compression ring runs dry, apparently. With this system the ring will indeed not touch the piston for half the stroke. Imagine, no ring flutter, what rev's would you like sir?
And there are plenty of coatings out there now that would do the job I would think.
This may be an internet question more than anything. From curiosity, I Googled the PVP superkart site and got their web address, but with the warning, "This site may be hacked." So I declined to go there, but does anyone know about this, either specifically or generally?
As a long-ago outboard racer from the States, I am ignorant of many of the names that I assume most of you know well. In particular, I had not heard of Mr. Ryger before all the speculation about his breakthrough engine began here. Would one of you, or perhaps Mr. Ryger himself, tell the clueless few (me) something of where he comes from in this game, a little background, nationality, etc., since the man seems to be on the verge of becoming one of the legendary figures in 2-stroke history?
If this is a Malossi MHR Cylinder have a close look at the outer Boostports. And at the B Ports.
The Malossi Cylinder I know has a B-Port without a Kicker (because the studs are right where the kicker would be on a modern cylinder). The outer boostport is doing the kicker-work.
So I would go on Option C: leave it as it came frome the Box ;-) Perhaps make the liner between the ports a bit shallower but nothing more.
hi there, well yes thats right they are plagued with gearbox problems once the power goes up.. but i started this some time ago and needed to at least get it to fire up. i will see if i can get it to fit the frame , another problem, as is the fact its not allowed in this format to get points racing anyway. i only tried this as a" guide " to producing a water cooled barrel( from existing bantam cast barrel as the rules allow), i have also got together some cvt parts to alleviate the gearbox issues ( which i think is also not allowed for racing, cvt) . but its kept me in the garage and out the pub......![]()
looks like this one https://www.google.com/search?q=Malo...RWZoDu09ITM%3A
I'm struggling to see how a piston moving through a ring fixed to the bore is any different from a piston with no ring in a cylinder with no ring, as in model engines.
As I understand it, rings on a conventional piston force outwards on the bore, providing a seal that the piston alone is incapable of providing, given tolerances to allow for expansion differences etc. etc..
It seems to me that a ring sitting in the bore would similarly need to be forced inwards on to the piston to provide the equivalent seal.
I can't see how this is possible without the piston crashing into the ring as it returns to the ring which has sprung inwards while the piston was elsewhere.
And then there is Harry's suggestion/hint/teaser that the piston doesn't touch the ring(s) anyway...
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