I just read my origional post that Frits responded to and i see it had a rather crude spelling mistake that may have confused as it would not have translated so well to Dutch the French word
"reservoir" pardon my
engerish
This is a neat word to describe what bucket is saying above.
Does that make more sense Frits.
The bit i was quoting from Robinson was referring to when a engine was tuned to a higher rev range than it was original to maintain the original pumping efficiency you reduce the volume by an amount specified (inversely proportional to the square root of the original crankcase volume) to match the new higher rev range.
assuming say you don't want to modify the angles and shapes of the transfers or if you have say downsized or upsized an engine?
however Robinson does a couple of chapters later say
1)high stream velocity
:High crankcase compression
:Narrow port windows
:Late timing (Long blow down period)
2)Low(er) stream velocity
:earlier timing,larger ports
: Direction(s) of streams become critical.
So i guess he had a ball in both courts as it were. but the 2nd option is the modern approach?or slightly different again?
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