Ok, Scott and I started this discussion in private, after I questioned a post he made on a thread on another site. I wanted explanations and he offered his. Myself being involved in process dynamics most of my professional life, I had a hard time figuring out the reasoning behind the explanation Scott gave me. Scott has worked many years with small engines and made reference to Jenning's writings (known to many as one of the best 2-stroke references ever). I have several writings from Jennings and other on 2-stroke theory so I went back and read it again and actually found where he mentions this about slanted ports.
You will see in the first picture below, the subject I was questioning. Jennings offers that a port at an angle has less effective area as a "straight-in" port. I think he failed to explain this enough and left way too much to interpretation. I know I'm nobody to question Jennings, but I must say I did not agree with the statement, and wanted to start this thread to get others thinking and discussing this subject. It is very interesting!
To better illustrate my own point of view on the matter I took a piece of 0.750" ID tubing and cut one end 90 degrees and the other at 45 degrees. See pictures. I then took some measurements for the surface calculations.
Consider this tube to be our intake tract. Measure the surface at the 90 degree end exit (pi x r2)which equals to: 3.1416 x 0.375 x 0.375 =
0.442 sq inches. Now the end of the tube cut at a 45 degree angle and measure the surface at exit (pixAxB) A= smallest radius, B= largest radius... this approximates to (I took live measurements off the actual piece I cut, so it can be off a bit, but still gives a close approximation: 3.1416 x 0.375 x 0.475 =
0.559 square inches. Evidently the area of the angled cut is greater...
So you can imagine at this point, I was really beginning to question Jennings (and Scott ha ha!!)... well I went back a 5th or 6th time to re-read the text below the picture and it finally hit me! Jennings states in the very beginning "Window areas here are identical"... these are the KEY words to understanding what Jennings was saying. He's not saying that 2 ports with same bore will flow differently if angled or not...he's saying that
if we want to maintain the same window opening (area) when using a slanted port, the bore will indeed need to be smaller... this is actually proven in my example above. (it's just in reverse)...
So in short, I still feel he didn't explain it clearly enough...it really leads to misinterpretation when he says that "effective area of straight in ports are greater than those entering the cylinder at an angle". This is only true if you are matching window sizes!