Jump to content

bigger piston = more hp?


jack vo

Recommended Posts

5 hours ago, ZillaFreak said:

A larger bore can mean wider ports in the cylinder wall. 

How is square the best compromise? TRX250R, LT250R, CR250R and most bikes are all undersquare. Quadzilla is square. Banshee and CR500 are oversquare.  So which engine is the best, the quadzilla engine because it is square?

As for the banshee being oversquare because it is cheaper and less machine work to go up in pistons than stroke.... how does this equate for yamaha when designing? 

the ports get wider (more area) with bigger bore but not at the same proportion as longer stroke

years ago some of the 250 were sqaure. why theyre undersqaure now seems kind of a mystery. ive talked to knowledgable people about it but theres mostly just speculation for answers. maybe it gave a favorable powerspread. maybe chassis handling was better. a email to one of the bike manufacturers might solve the mystery if u could get in touch with the right person

i think the banshee stemed from a street bike engine so you would have to ask why did that streetbike need oversqaure. my guess is a more compact package. given the cylinders are sqaushed together also, this makes the most sense to me. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, sheerider11 said:

I remember back in the day this came up. I think I remember some one saying the square engines just wouldn't be as efficient as the others.
This was when people cared and had better conversations tho.

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G891A using Tapatalk
 

im sure u could make a valid arguement for each side of the fence (oversqaure, sqaure, undersqaure) but at the end of the day sqaure is generally regarded as the best compromise in hiperf 2stroke. mechanically ,oversqaure may b better suited to high rpm but u lose valuable port area (breathing ability) vs sqaure,/undersqaure. i think the main problem with undersqaure , although it may breath well,  u may end  up with excessively high piston speeds which could limit rpm , perhaps it may have more friction loss also

Link to comment
Share on other sites

12 hours ago, registered user said:

the ports get wider (more area) with bigger bore but not at the same proportion as longer stroke

years ago some of the 250 were sqaure. why theyre undersqaure now seems kind of a mystery. ive talked to knowledgable people about it but theres mostly just speculation for answers. maybe it gave a favorable powerspread. maybe chassis handling was better. a email to one of the bike manufacturers might solve the mystery if u could get in touch with the right person

i think the banshee stemed from a street bike engine so you would have to ask why did that streetbike need oversqaure. my guess is a more compact package. given the cylinders are sqaushed together also, this makes the most sense to me. 

Oversquare means bigger bore than stroke. So saying the banshee is oversquare because the cylinders are squashed together is complete false. If yamaha wanted the cylinders close together, it would be undersquare aka longer stroke than bore.

 

The fact are, a shorter stroke allows for higher revs, hence why most high revving engines are oversquare. A longer stroke allows for more torque, hence why most workhouse engines are undersquare. 

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

mechanically , the further oversqaure, the better it would lend itself to higher revs. we see it in f1 like has been said. but u seem to not be able to understand 2stroke doesnt work in the same way. the further over sqaure u go, the larger the difference between port area of sqaure vs oversqaure. bottom line, oversqaure ends up with less port area, the further it goes away from sqaure. it doesnt make a fuk of difference if mechanically the engine is safe to 40k rpm , if it cant breath then its all for nothing. sorry if i cant explain it easier than that 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

wow there sure is alot of bullshit on the net. some clown on a rc airplane site says the oversqaure will meen smaller crankcase and thus more efficient pumping at higher revs. smaller crankcase will have higher peak pressure and  thus more pumping loss. i believe that would be no different than pumping loss that happens as compession ratio goes up

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the past square motors worked great, were typically reliable, and make great power. For instance look how many 78 x 78 DMs are around that fkn rip!! Now 5 years ago the performance seemed to drop off once you got out of square on the stroke side, when the stroke was bigger. They just didn't seem to work as well as the square stuff or the stuff out of square in the opposite direction. And as a rule of thumb, I would say that holds true in most applications to this day. BUT there are a few out of square motors on the stroke side running around that FKN fly, but those are typically owned by very experienced owners and built by very experienced builders.

 

And there are limits to how far out of square remains successful. 54 x 78..... didn't work great. 58 x 78 is a fkn riot....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the past square motors worked great, were typically reliable, and make great power. For instance look how many 78 x 78 DMs are around that fkn rip!! Now 5 years ago the performance seemed to drop off once you got out of square on the stroke side, when the stroke was bigger. They just didn't seem to work as well as the square stuff or the stuff out of square in the opposite direction. And as a rule of thumb, I would say that holds true in most applications to this day. BUT there are a few out of square motors on the stroke side running around that FKN fly, but those are typically owned by very experienced owners and built by very experienced builders.
 
And there are limits to how far out of square remains successful. 54 x 78..... didn't work great. 58 x 78 is a fkn riot....
Wtf are you doing in a technical discussion??? ;-)



Envoyé de mon SM-G965W en utilisant Tapatalk

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...