Durkee
Industrial
- Apr 16, 2003
- 11
I do a lot of 2 stroke engine work and just lately we have been struggling with an issue about heat cycling.
Most modern 2 stroke engines have cast aluminum pistons along with a water cooled cast aluminum cylinder which is nicasil coated then bored and honed to size. We know that if we use an aftermarket forged piston, that we need a larger clearance due to the fact that a forged piston expands due to thermal stresses faster than a cast piston. *We should be able to use the same clearances with both pistons if the engine was allowed to warm up thoroughly before getting pinned. But we have to consider the customer and their warm-up practices, which most of them don't have. I just want to build a reliable engine and keep happy customers and if heat cycling the engine several times before getting it back to the customer would allow me to run tighter tolerances, that is what I want to do.
There is a lot of talk about heat cycling the engine to stabilize the materials used. Many say that after the engine is heat cycled many times that the parts don't expand due to the heat as much as they did previously. I tend not to agree with this. I don't think that the coefficient of expansion for a material can change. The reason that I heat cycle a new engine is to allow the grease (the crank bearings are packed with isoflex grease) to ooze out of the bearings a little at a time. Otherwise the grease may expand to quickly and cause a bearing siezure.
The question is this: Can the coefficient of expansion of the materials used in engine construction decrease as the engine is heat cycled?
Sorry about the length.
Keith Durkee
Most modern 2 stroke engines have cast aluminum pistons along with a water cooled cast aluminum cylinder which is nicasil coated then bored and honed to size. We know that if we use an aftermarket forged piston, that we need a larger clearance due to the fact that a forged piston expands due to thermal stresses faster than a cast piston. *We should be able to use the same clearances with both pistons if the engine was allowed to warm up thoroughly before getting pinned. But we have to consider the customer and their warm-up practices, which most of them don't have. I just want to build a reliable engine and keep happy customers and if heat cycling the engine several times before getting it back to the customer would allow me to run tighter tolerances, that is what I want to do.
There is a lot of talk about heat cycling the engine to stabilize the materials used. Many say that after the engine is heat cycled many times that the parts don't expand due to the heat as much as they did previously. I tend not to agree with this. I don't think that the coefficient of expansion for a material can change. The reason that I heat cycle a new engine is to allow the grease (the crank bearings are packed with isoflex grease) to ooze out of the bearings a little at a time. Otherwise the grease may expand to quickly and cause a bearing siezure.
The question is this: Can the coefficient of expansion of the materials used in engine construction decrease as the engine is heat cycled?
Sorry about the length.
Keith Durkee