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On Mar 5, 6:56*pm, durabol wrote:
For the last few years I have toyed with the idea of building a homemade two-stroke engine for UL use. What keyed my interest was reading about homemade model aircraft engines and reading and watching a re-enactment of the Wright brother's first flight with a replica engine (not a two-stroke engine). Has anyone made a 2-stroke engine from scratch? One may need to cast aluminium, may need a lathe and milling machine with boring head and hone or perhaps the boring and honing of the cylinder and bearing journals could be farmed out. A commercial carburetor and piston could be used. Two-stroke engines seem simple enough that home construction may be possible, if not practical. A direct drive engine will be that much heavier when you take into account the weight of the drive reduction system. I have calculated the weight of an 80x80mm bore and stroke 2 cylinder opposed engine and it was a bit under 40lbs which should give about 1hp/lbs. I used 10mm cylinder and crankcase wall thickness and a 1.25" dia crank. I have got some idea of port-time-area from the freeware computer program called "BiMotion". I'm not sure how good the data is for lowish speed engines but I guess it is a start. I have also worked up a spreadsheet for similar information. I don't think a reed valve system is needed for this engine since it is only going to operate at a fairly narrow rpm range and the port timing isn't critical. Piston ported valves offer similar performance to other induction types but only over a narrow rpm range which is what I have planned for the engine. I plan to build an engine with a restrictive exhaust to ensure no fuel escapes. I have heard that piston ported engines can spit some fuel out of the carb at idle but this doesn't seem like a major problem. Rotary valves via crank shaft induction (disk or drum valves as well) is an interesting idea but I don't think I need the critical timing they provide. I was planning on using the largest two-stroke piston (not a diesel piston) I could find and using the largest stoke that was reasonable, something like 90x105mm Brock There's any amount of engineering info out there on two-strokes, books have been written. They were a staple project in The Model Engineer magazine for years, should you want to look that up. What's UL use? You'd be basically recreating a commodity item. Resurrect one from a defunct snowblower, weed-whacker or Lawnboy and spend more time on figuring out the project you want to drive. The engineering's done, you aren't likely to improve on what's already been built. Want overhead valves? Been done. Rotary valves, ditto. Fuel injection, same. Separate lube system, been done. Opposed twins, flat fours, square fours, Vs, Xs, Ws, all been done. Separate forced air pumping, too. They basically suck thermodynamically except the one feature they've got going is power-to-weight ratio, the small ones pump out a lot of horsepower, usually at high RPM, for their size. For that you can go with an existing engine and spend more time on the rest of the project. Stan |
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