I found some interesting information about flat plane vs cross plane crankshafts on engines, and also firing order considerations.
A rather involved topic, but interesting.
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A rather involved topic, but interesting.
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I agree wholeheartedly, as my BMW R1200 GSA boxer has got to have the smoothest, most vibration free ride of all the (100 or so) bikes I’ve owned since 1967. Back in the 60s, while racing American flat track and TT, the shop BSA had more torque and power than the Triumphs that I was assigned to, and it seemed to have a smoother power band.When it comes to flat engines (opposed twin and opposed 4) the crankshaft is arranged as a 'boxer' configuration, the pistons in each row move in opposite directions to each other. This balances both primary and secondary forces leaving only a small rocking couple from the cylinder bore offset. It also gives even firing.
For an inline twin, we have the issue of a conflict between balance and even firing. Aligned crankpins give even firing with a power stroke every 360 degrees, but poor balance akin to a large single. 180 degree cranks have very uneven firing, but ok primary balance (the secondary balance is still poor, and there is a rocking couple). The 270 degree cranks that are popular now are more or less a compromise between the two.
The vast majority of inline twins are the 360 degree type. Multiple reasons for this: one is that uneven firing often produces more significant vibration than the 360 twin's imbalance, especially at low RPM. The other is related to airflow, specifically the evenly spaced induction strokes of a 360 twin work well when fed by a single carburettor. The uneven engines are subject to issues with one cylinder 'starving' the other of mixture, leading to a lean condition on the starved cylinder unless a separate carb barrel is provided for each. Finally, the 360 twin lends itself to simple wasted spark ignition with no distributor.
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