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#1
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The thread above reminded me of a question I have about rotary engines....
Just how was fuel & air admitted into the cylinders????? The only way I can think of is some sort of central machined plate, that has holes in the right positions so that when it turns (along with the cylinders / propellor) it meets up with inlets (non-rotating) for fuel & air, that inject into the appropriate cylinder..... thoughts everyone? Stupot |
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On Mon, 10 Nov 2003 08:01:33 GMT, "Stuart Chapman" wrote:
The thread above reminded me of a question I have about rotary engines.... Just how was fuel & air admitted into the cylinders????? The only way I can think of is some sort of central machined plate, that has holes in the right positions so that when it turns (along with the cylinders / propellor) it meets up with inlets (non-rotating) for fuel & air, that inject into the appropriate cylinder..... thoughts everyone? Stupot The intake valve was actually located in the top of the piston, this allowed the fuel/air mixture in the crankcase to enter the cylinder on the "down" stroke. Al Minyard |
#3
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The intake valve was actually located in the top of the piston, this allowed
the fuel/air mixture in the crankcase to enter the cylinder on the "down" stroke. Al Minyard Were rotary engines 2 cycle or 4 cycle? |
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#5
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![]() Orval Fairbairn wrote: In article , (JohnF73157) wrote: The intake valve was actually located in the top of the piston, this allowed the fuel/air mixture in the crankcase to enter the cylinder on the "down" stroke. Al Minyard Were rotary engines 2 cycle or 4 cycle? 2-cycle -- hence all the castor oil, which was about the only suitable oil at the time for that use. Incidentally, a lot of racing cars used castor oil up into the 1960s. Not to mention 2-cycle racing motorcycles. I have great smell-memories of attending bike races in my early teens, when the sport was less stratified, and more grass-roots, run-what-ya-brung. Sitting around an abandoned quarry turned into a scrambles track, bikes (many converted from street use) from five or six different displacement classes screaming around in circles under a cloud of sweet-fragrance blue smoke...not very environmentally friendly, but a spectacle I'm glad to have witnessed. |
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David Windhorst wrote:
Not to mention 2-cycle racing motorcycles. I have great smell-memories of attending bike races in my early teens, when the sport was less stratified, and more grass-roots, run-what-ya-brung. Sitting around an abandoned quarry turned into a scrambles track, bikes (many converted from street use) from five or six different displacement classes screaming around in circles under a cloud of sweet-fragrance blue smoke...not very environmentally friendly, but a spectacle I'm glad to have witnessed. Although I have a 4-stroke behind me when I fly nowadays, 2-strokes have evolved into extraordinarily reliable engines and I've accumulated more than 1,500 hrs. flying aircraft equipped with "grassroot" 2-stroke engines. We normally premix the oil 50:1 (not Castor oil) but except when starting after a prolonged period of inactivity, they rarely emit the characteristic blue 2-cycle smoke anymore. Given their impressive power-to-rate ratio, 2-cycles are ideal for light sport A/C. For example, in 1993 an intrepid Alaskan pilot flew a 2-stroke over Mt. McKinley's 20,320 ft. summit, and on Sept. 29, 2000, Czech pilot Jan Bem set a world altitude record of 26,546 ft. overflying the peak of Annapurna, Nepal, in the Himalaya Mountains while flying a 2-stroke powered trike. The U.S. military still uses 2-cycle engines on numerous different remotely-controlled surveillance drones. |
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Just as a matter of curiosity why were rotary engines used?
Dan, U. S. Air Force, retired |
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Just as a matter of curiosity why were rotary engines used?
Delicious weight/horsepower ratio. Simple, reliable. Being aircooled, perhaps less liable to gunfire damage. Smooth operating. Available. There is possibility that there still is a modern engine hidden in the concept. Quent |
#9
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One of the big advantages was that the rotary motion assured a
substantial flow of cooling air across the cylinders and cylinder heads, even when the aircraft was flying slowly, or the engine was instlled in a pusher configuration. This was very important since the engineering knowledge and manufacturing technology available at the time was not really sufficient to achieve satisfactory air cooling with static cylinders. Most early attempts at air cooled aircraft engines with static cylinders had limited success. At best, very rich fuel-air mixtures had to be used to help with the cooling. In other cases, such as the disasterous ABC Dragonfly (of which over 10,000 were ordered off the drawing board), the result was an engine that was completely useless. Robert |
#10
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![]() QDurham wrote: Just as a matter of curiosity why were rotary engines used? Delicious weight/horsepower ratio. Simple, reliable. Being aircooled, perhaps less liable to gunfire damage. Smooth operating. Available. There is possibility that there still is a modern engine hidden in the concept. Quent Rotaries got applied to motorcycles a few times, too, both to the rear wheel http://www.motorcycle.com/mo/mcmuseu...tos/millet.jpg and the front http://www.magpie.com/nycmoto/guggen...ola_engine.jpg Gyroscopic effect and all that rotating mass reportedly made turning the latter about like trying to roll an a/c into the rotational direction of a big cubic-inch aviation powerplant. |
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