Oval pistons mean that you need to have near perfect design and macining to get them to fit. With oval, you need to line up the conrod connection perfectly with the cylinder, so that you aren't putting twisting force on the oval piston causing strange wear on the piston and cylinder walls, whereas with a circular piston, you just have to make sure that the conrod is in the centre of the cylinder.
Also, with oval piston, there is much more cylinder wall area for less piston surface area, thus meaning that more heat energy will be absorbed into the cylinder walls, effectively absorbing more of the explosive energy of the combustion than a round piston engine. This effect may be minimal though.
Another point was that if it's not circular, then there is more piston circumference for the same piston surface area meaning more piston to cylinder wall friction, again, I think this is minimal. But to be quite honest, I don't see the need for any of this fancy technology. All it seems to do is make it harder.
I haven't even put much thought into the piston ring difficulties that would come with oval pistons.
So, what are the advantages? You can make a larger bore engine skinnier... We don't really need to, the current flock of inline 4 engines are seriously bitchin'. If you want to make it skinnier while being large bore, then just use a V configuration... V4 or V5 really kicks the Llamas ass.
Anybody think of any other advantages? Apart from bending racing rules of course.
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