Hi All,
Being a newly minted engineer (as in Diploma not Engineer with a Degree), obviously I have a head full of knowledge and no real world experience.
I am also learning quite a lot including self learning (I have a book and I am not afraid to use it!). The current book I have is about the design of
four stroke engines, so with pen at the ready I was going to use this book to help design a basic One Cylinder petrol (ok, gas for you Americans) four
stroke engine. Nothing fancy, just something that "should" work and has all of the basic bits like cranks and valves and cam shafts etc. For those
interested, the book is "Engineering Fundamentals of the Internal Combustion Engine" by Willard W Pulkrabek. This guy is apparently a Guru and is
better known for his books about Two Stroke engines but I find it easy to read and understand.
I am at the very beginning of this journey. I am going to read the book and work everything out as I go, then draw it and try to build it. One of the
things I need to decide is how big to make it. I want it to be big enough so that it doesn't cost too much to fabricate, but not so small I need a
watchmaker's lathe to do the machining. I also thought that if it was big enough it might serve some useful purpose in the future. One idea in the
back of my mind was that it might be nice to use the base design for other more complex designs later. My thoughts on this were: a One Cylinder
engine should be easy to turn into something like a V-2 (No. NOT some fancy rocket from the 1940s), that in turn could become a V-4 then a V-8.
By now you are probably thinking that innocence and naivity is so sweet. Well - we all started somewhere.
So, some questions.
What is the smallest practical engine that can be built? I don't want to either make my own spark plugs or source ones only available to Pygmy tribes
of the mythical Himalayas of Antarctica. I want to scale it so that I DON'T have to fabricate EVERYTHING.
What is a good size engine that might be of practical use? My thoughts here were that a 5 Litre V8 is common so what about a 0.5 Litre engine?
This would make a single cylinder engine about 25cc or 1.5cu" - is 1/10th scale too small?
The little I have read so far suggests that a "square" engine, or close to it, is practical. What the book does NOT tell me is that Stroke is easy, but is Bore
the DIAMETER of the cylinder so that 25cc = 5 x 5 or is it the ACTUAL area of the cylinder (Pi x 2.5^2) x 5 = 19.63cc when working out the size? The book
has some great definitions but that particular one is ambiguous.
What are general tolerances used in engines like this? Metric please - I can cope with "thous" but I have 10 fingers not 12 so it is easier for a "youngster"
(over 50) from Australia to work it out. 1 thou = 0.0254 mm - just sitting on the edge of the accuracy of "common" machine tools.
Final question. I have been a member here for a while, mainly lurking and reading other people's posts. I did at one stage download some files from
this site but they seem to have disappeared. I know there was a way to do it but there don't seem to be many files in the downloads section, only
posts about the files. I recall downloading some Steam Engine plans some time ago. I notice I can attach file to this post so is it I just didn't dig deep
enough into the Downloads forum? What I would really like to find is a simple car style engine plan to have a good look at. It doesn't have to be a V8
just one with all of the standard bits - cylinders pistons, crank and cam shafts, valves, etc.
Thanks in advance for all of your help.
Cheers I agree with above assume ts.