Moderators: GAHorn, Karl Towle, Bruce Fenstermacher
daedaluscan wrote:The higher piston reduces the total volume of mixture in the cylinder….
GAHorn wrote:daedaluscan wrote:The higher piston reduces the total volume of mixture in the cylinder….
..which is displacement…correct? (Not trying to argue the point…just trying to wrap my small mind around it.)
lowNslow wrote:So how does this all equal 35 extra HP ?
daedaluscan wrote:Displacement is the volume moved by the piston. Either the volume sucked in through the intake valve (assuming perfect conditions of course), the volume displaced by the piston on the compression stroke, or the volume pushed out through the exhaust valve. Simply bore cross sectional area x stroke (x number of cylinders).
Bruce Fenstermacher wrote:George, you are thinking correct. A engine with a taller piston vs the same engine with a shorter piston, ie length from the center of the piston pin to the too of the piston, has a smaller displacement.
Bruce Fenstermacher wrote:George, you are thinking correct. A engine with a taller piston vs the same engine with a shorter piston, ie length from the center of the piston pin to the too of the piston, has a smaller displacement.
GAHorn wrote:Well…we may be confused on terminology… but the fact is (and what I was attempting to point out)….. a taller piston will begin to compress a smaller volume of fuel/air than would a shorter piston…. all other aspects being equal. If a taller piston is installed in-place of a shorter piston….then a smaller amount of fuel/air mixture will be used in the combustion process. The increase in compression may allow a higher-energy fuel (higher octane) to be utilized and it may produce more HP…. but there is also a reduction of thermal capacity due to the reduction of fuel/air volume being used in the process.
GAHorn wrote:... If a taller piston is installed in-place of a shorter piston….then a smaller amount of fuel/air mixture will be used in the combustion process. ...
GAHorn wrote:Well…we may be confused on terminology… but the fact is (and what I was attempting to point out)….. a taller piston will begin to compress a smaller volume of fuel/air than would a shorter piston…. all other aspects being equal. If a taller piston is installed in-place of a shorter piston….then a smaller amount of fuel/air mixture will be used in the combustion process. The increase in compression may allow a higher-energy fuel (higher octane) to be utilized and it may produce more HP…. but there is also a reduction of thermal capacity due to the reduction of fuel/air volume being used in the process.
GAHorn wrote:daedaluscan wrote:Displacement is the volume moved by the piston. Either the volume sucked in through the intake valve (assuming perfect conditions of course), the volume displaced by the piston on the compression stroke, or the volume pushed out through the exhaust valve. Simply bore cross sectional area x stroke (x number of cylinders).
If the piston is taller…then it takes up more space in the cylinder…no matter where it sits. If a short piston is removed…and a tall piston is installed… then the available space above that piston is reduced. So..it seems to me that if less space exists in the cylinder because the newly installed piston is larger….then the capacity (displacement) of the air inside the cylinder is less. Yes, because the taller piston moves closer to the top of the cylinder…. It Compresses the air to a greater degree (raises compression ratio)…. But the amount of air being compressed is less.
THAT is what I always thought of as displacement. It’s the definition of displacement which is not making sense to me.
If an original piston sitting at the bottom of an original cylinder…times six…equals 300 cu. inches…. then how can a taller piston which takes up more space inside the cylinder…. also equal 300 cu. Inches.
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