Were combustion pressure and hot gasses burging off the lubrication on piston skirt?
That test definitely wasn't thought out very well. Pretty much a farce
Were combustion pressure and hot gasses burging off the lubrication on piston skirt?
That test definitely wasn't thought out very well. Pretty much a farce
The pictures were hard to see, but more combustion marks on upper of Al than steel piston.
BUT, so many variables, Gaps, tapers, Cam, operating temps, etc.
The Military Industrial Complex provides grant money to conduct "interesting" experiments on 2T motorcycle engines.....
....and you call that a farce? Shame on youI want to know where to send the application.
"Busted" I don't really know that. Just cos it didn't work great this time, doesn't mean it can't eventually.
Like many of the MythBuster's experiments the result could be quite different with improved set-up & techniques.
(But possibly less Telegenic & less Blow ups)
Look at it this way...they tried some stuff and found out some things that worked better than others.
And they reported what they did and what they found.
Certainly pointing one possible way to low friction, hi reving, more powerful 2T racing engines.
If anybody was looking in that direction (forward?)
Cheers, Daryl
"First they tell you you're wrong, and they can prove it.
Then they tell you you're right, but it's not important.
Then they tell you it is important, but they knew it all along."
Charles Kettering.
To be fair, Rotax have incorporated composite Fe/Al pistons/Fe bore coat in their hard running E-TEC Ski-Doo mills..
This is to support the ring lands while running on the edge of lean/low lube due to economy/emissions control needs..
Certainly one of the possibility's advanced in the study.
Yes, like you say I have had enough failed pistons of my own ....![]()
These guys were paid to explore the ringless piston idea and publish their findings. Busted, well maybe or maybe not but they certainly put some effort into exploring the basic idea and arrived at a point where my interest in exploring ringless pistons for myself is certainly busted.
The idea was good, certainly cought my interest but I noted that even on the best runs the ringless piston did not make anywhere near the power of a conventional RM piston and ring and the setup was very fragile. They suggested improvements like a labyrinth seal instead of a ring but I suspect that after a lot of effort even the best ringless power wise will only come close to a conventional piston and ring.
I don't imagine I could do better than they did, so thanks to their efforts I now think it would not be worthwhile exploring ringless pistons myself but if anyone has the energy to make the effort, I am happy to do the dyno work for free.
Ringless Pistons ....... I am still struggling with my EFI 2T project.
For a defunct technology (Wankel rotary piston engine) a fiddler has obtained nearly a US $ mil to play with..
http://www.businesswire.com/news/hom...Fuel-Efficient
Stupidity/lack of due diligence/kickbacks? Suspicious, sure, but whatever.. Trump might buy it..
Frankly, anyhow you cut it though , such a mill - fundamentally - cannot be 'eco'-trained..
Look at all the really big bucks companies who tried & failed, even Toyo Kogyo 'Mazda' had to flag it, 'ross of face' or no...
My Mind is Open...my wallet is closed.
Cheers, Daryl
"First they tell you you're wrong, and they can prove it.
Then they tell you you're right, but it's not important.
Then they tell you it is important, but they knew it all along."
Charles Kettering.
No Apex Seals = No Piston Rings
from LiquidPiston on Vimeo.
Unless they can get away with running it so lean/low powered - it makes no pressure/power/heat..
The fundamental epicycloid rotary piston issues with massive combustion chamber area/heat rejection are still there..
I was wondering if anyone would notice the pun. Glad you didOriginally Posted by Frits Overmars
.
How about looking back for a change? Then they might have found the rather more thorough research into ringless pistons carried out by the then-leading two-stroke company MZ around 1960. Their conclusion: it won't work.
I'd say that's a pretty good summary Jonny. Among the various phrases that hurt my eye, this took the cake:This has nothing to do with thermodynamics or gas dynamics; it's just plain simple mechanical engineering, or rather the lack of it."The piston weight must match the stock aluminium piston weight to maintain the proper engine balance"
Anyone with a basic understanding of reciprocating engines should know that lightening a piston in an engine without balance shaft, such as the Suzuki RM250 that was used for the test, will always reduce the inertia forces and improve the balance (unless you lighten the piston so much that the crank bobweights shift the balance factor to over 100%, which will be practically impossible to achieve).
The LiquidPiston engine does use apex seals, Daryl. But they're not in the rotor tips, but stationary, in the housing, where they can be better cooled.
I had a discussion with the inventor a couple of years ago. The combustion takes place in a hemispheric chamber which is a huge improvement compared to a Wankel.
But then the exhaust gases are lead down through the rotor, heating it up asymmetrically, which spoils the idea for me.
Maybe, but what if MZ had decided to solve the issues and make it work, they might still be the leading two-stroke company.
There were a lot of things in 1960 that were impossible/implausible/impractical that we now benefit (or suffer) from everyday.
How many back then would have thought that a 125cc single could produce 50+ HP or a two-stroke engine could run effectively with the crankcase exposed to the intake 24/7?
Cheers, Daryl
"First they tell you you're wrong, and they can prove it.
Then they tell you you're right, but it's not important.
Then they tell you it is important, but they knew it all along."
Charles Kettering.
Ringless pistons have been around in small engines for a long time. They are superior to ringed pistons due to lower friction. They require a special fit and have the advantage that the methanol based fuels run at a lower temperature than gasoline. Very small engines (up to 1.5 cc) have been mass produced with steel pistons in steel cylinders. The most successful use high silicon aluminum pistons in chrome plated brass liners. This is called an ABC piston and liner. Chromed aluminum liners also work and that's called an AAC piston and liner. Those all work well up to around 15 cc. One manufacturer tried his AAC system on a 35 cc gasoline engine. That was a disaster and he went back to a ringed piston.
Lohring Miller
I am not sure if it was MZ but it was about that time, someone's disk valve 2T seized the disk in the open position during a dyno run. It was noted that it continued to make full power until the throttle was closed and the revs dropped so 24/7 has been known about for a long time. 24/7 has also been used in old 2T stationary engines where the engine is cranked up to speed and then inlet pipe resonance takes over and keeps it at a steady industrial like tickover suitable for generators, milking machines and pumps.
There are some things that are better acknowledged as being impossible. After a bit of a try most realize that you can't lift yourself up buy your shoe laces. But an enthusiast could buy better shoe laces and keep trying I suppose.
It was MZ Rob, re the rigless pistons whoops i just noticed you were talking about the valve
but to be fair they had very little metalurgical expertise and were also not able to build decent forks or ignitions or spark plugs.
Pretty sure its mentioned in here, anyway i have posted about it previously.
I think its interesting but a dead end, there is more pressing problems limiting a two stroke emissions etc.
interstingly reading about the Vdue Bimota it seems most of the problems it intitially had have been solved and traced to poor fuel mapping and leaky crankcases casting poor seal design and poor assembly detail.
Ed. Note December 2013 - Since writing this piece in 2012 I've learned that the main problem with the V-Due is improper crankcase sealing due to flaws in the crankcase castings, not simply a wonky fuel injection setup. You can fix a V-Due! Bob Steinbugler at Bimota Spirit offers newly manufactured crankcases that fix this issue and allow you to rebuild the V-Due into the screaming sport weapon it was meant to be. If only Bimota had knownMakes sense right?! Erratic power delivery with injection or carbs...
He has cast his own case halves to accept a proper beefy 2-stroke crank seal and offers them for sale separately or will rebuild your entire engine.
http://rideonboard.net/onboard-the-bimota-vdue/
Last edited by husaberg; 20th November 2016 at 10:20. Reason: edited
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Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken
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