To further educate those willing to follow this subject, let me elaborate further some of the dynamics evolved in a racing caliber tuned 2 stroke engines.
At the design level, head shape, volume and compression ratio on a 2 stroke differ from a 4 stroke.
In a
4 stroke compression ratio is based upon the
FULL STROKE of piston from BDC to TDC.
In a
2 stroke compression ratio is based upon the point in which the piston dome closes the roof of the exhaust port, and the
Compression ratio is based upon the stroke left over from this point to TDC
** So if we had both a 4 stroke engine and a 2 stroke engine of the same displacement, with the 2 stroke engine having 180* ex timing, The ACTUAL trapped air to get compressed into the volume of the head in the 2 stroke engine would only be HALF that of the 4 stroke. The head volume between both engine would need to be adjusted because of this.
The really cool part of this is that we use 2 strokes !! ... And we have many tricks to boost the compression without doing it mechanically with smaller head volumes. ( This statement relates too one piece designs that CANNOT be changed )
The tuned pipe fitted on most racing 2 strokes are in essence SUPER CHARGERS .... by design there divergent cone is a megaphone and actually draws out a greater volume of air/fuel than engines actual displacement. Then as the return wave gets back to the exhaust port just before the port closes, a pressure wave returns some of this drawn out excess air/fuel and stuffs it back in on top of the ascending piston.
** What we have now is a trapped volume of air/fuel that has greater volume than what we would have without the pipes help. We are talking CAPTIVE COMPRESSION, we just trapped more volume !! The actual Compression pressure just went up
Basically the reason why tuned pipes increase HP. My intent tho is too help you under stand that loss's of static compression ratios are overcome at higher engine speeds. By starting out with lower compression a MORE RADICAL stronger boosting pipe design can be used.
There is a point tho when the pipe boost can OVER CHARGE the volume of air/fuel trapped, then the captive compression volume with the engines compression ratio can go too high actually hurting performance
Ignition timing, Fuel octain rating, Engine temperature also effect the point of maximum working compression pressure any engine with tolerate before performance degrades. The RPM in which you need peak power at, degree of over rev beyond power peak and mechanical limits of the engine itself all need to be addressed in the search for excellent performance from your engines.
It is interesting that some fully developed Zenoahs can run competitively against the billet engines, even tho billet engines have much higher compression.
You do see tho the pipe design on the billet engines differ from the better running Zenoahs. There in lyes what I am talking about having pipe design and boost strength being able to bridge this gap in a lower compression engine still making high HP figures.
Just FYI ....
Scott