dieselpilot said:
Which injector are you using? Or were you able to get the tiny Bosch just for Eco Marathon?
I'm not familiar with the "tiny Bosch injector". The injector we, and a lot of other teams, use is a Keihin injector that flows around 33 cc/minute. This does work for the power ranges that we're looking at, but at fairly low duty cycle.
I've built an experimental injector based on that one, whereon I removed the orifice tip at the very end of the injector and put my own new end on, with a smaller orifice. The stock orifice has two 150 micron diameter holes in it, and I've been able to reliably make 30 micron diameter holes using the UV laser in my lab, so we should be able to trim the fuel flow way, way down. Flow testing is forthcoming.
dieselpilot said:
What are the basics design specs so far?
I wasn't quite expecting to delve into design specifics in this thread, but I have your attention now, so I may as well. Of course, I understand that no "model engine" already has this feature set. I'm pretty long-winded, so this is going to be long.
The design specs are loose so far; the 35-50cc displacement is chosen based on power requirements and estimates of achievable power per displacement.
That being said, we know it'll be:
- 4-stroke
- air cooled
- gasoline burning
- throttled
- fuel injection (easy for me, granted necessary tuning)
- computer controlled TCI spark (easy for me)
- As many ball bearings as possible
- Electric start
- compactness / lightness
I've seen plenty of
terrible e-start additions, and it's a classic example of how adding it afterwards is a lot of effort for mediocre results.
Overhead valve & cam are desired based on the significantly higher HP/liter that's been achieved with that configuration. I understand that this might be a red herring; I've considered that it might be "better" to have relatively low power/displacement, if higher thermal efficiency can be had in such a configuration. I can't fully optimize the design in a single shot, so ... that is being elided for now.
A desired feature would also be ... ease of construction, so once I produce all the CNC programs and jigs, I can easily spin off multiple copies of the engine.
I mean, making a cylinder should only take a few
minutes of cutting time on CNC lathe. And the liners/sleeves could be directly finished to 25 micron concentricity! If I built a honing tool, I could probably even finish hone them right in the chuck.
Interestingly, I often hear scoffs when I say how I want to reduce this thing to a series of automated manufacturing steps, but I think there is a serious boon therein.
Targeted engine speeds are for a single stage transmission, but there's only so far that can be practically taken (~10:1 with a huge output sprocket). Building a reducer box directly into the engine would be a neat feature, I think. That nice mini T5 transmission would be great! But the complexity of that in and of itself is so huge.
I don't think adding an integral speed reducer will be hugely difficult.
As many ball bearings as possible; possibly even little end con-rod needle bearings. Every model engine I've looked at so far uses little end bushings.
Oiling system is to be determined, and I was hoping to learn something about that by looking at a myriad of engine designs on this scale. I've had some ideas about how to do it using just a slinger and a minimal sump, or possibly a pre-pressurized oil reservoir.
Sort of on that sub-topic: Jerry Howell's V-twin engine is specifically described, on his website, as "able to run all day long as a generator". That certainly hasn't seemed to be the design goal for a lot of other model engine projects (nothing wrong with that), which makes me want to compare his design to others, so I've ordered a set of plans for that, too.
A counter-balancer would be great, too, although I've not seen one on a model engine yet. And since I can only afford junky, old motorcycles, I've not even dismantled a real engine with a counter-balancer in it.
So, desired/concept:
- DFM, in the context of CNC
- Integral speed reducer
- counter-balancer
- solenoid compression release
I hope that gives some picture of what feature set I am hoping to achieve. A motivator for a "ground up" engine was that addition of these to existing commercial engines would be equivalently as time consuming and complex as just designing it in from the start, and that there can be great value in integration. Very often, people are aghast at the mention of EFI, and the complexities therein; having extensive electronics and programming knowledge, that part will not be the challenge. Lastly, I'm also interested in just because, well, I am interested in the hobby. I've always wanted to build model IC engine, and it just happens that I think this is a really salient application.