Owen_N
Well-Known Member
My memory may be playing tricks on me, but I seem to remember a comment that an old-time manufacturer such a CZ once made an engine that only used the petrol as a lubricant.
There is no trace on line, so this may not be true.
If it were true, more people would be doing it.
A holdup to this theory is that petrol will vaporize at engine temperatures, and will not adhere to surfaces.
possibly a special petrol blend that does not use heavy mineral oil could be made that will lubricate.
Petrol is normally a blend of highly volatile and less volatile liquids.
You can buy "emergency" petrol that has low volatility, but will extend your existing petrol.
You can run an engine on kerosene if you first start it on petrol, but I suspect that knock resistance is not so good.- maybe 6.5:1 in a 4-stroke engine would be safe, but not
in a more modern carburetted engine.
I will look this up.
You need a lubricant that remains in liquid form at quite high temperatures.
Possibly diesel fuel would mainly remain liquid right up to the flash point in air, and could lubricate the engine.
However, this is mainly injected close to tdc, and not circulated through the engine.
Small, variable compression model airplane engines could run on diesel fuel. ether, and kerosene , instead of using diluted castor oil as a lubricant.
no-one seems to use mineral oil-maybe it doesn't mix well with kerosene?
Mineral oil mixes well with methylated spirits.
****************************************************************************************
The overall objective is to remove "wet" oil emissions and smoke from the exhaust.
I have heard of "ashless" two-stroke oil, but haven't heard of it lately. I will do a search.
<edit>
Stihl synthetic says 1:50. I have been using 1:28, so maybe I will go to 1:50 once my engine is run in a bit.
1000/50 = 20 ml per litre.
There is no trace on line, so this may not be true.
If it were true, more people would be doing it.
A holdup to this theory is that petrol will vaporize at engine temperatures, and will not adhere to surfaces.
possibly a special petrol blend that does not use heavy mineral oil could be made that will lubricate.
Petrol is normally a blend of highly volatile and less volatile liquids.
You can buy "emergency" petrol that has low volatility, but will extend your existing petrol.
You can run an engine on kerosene if you first start it on petrol, but I suspect that knock resistance is not so good.- maybe 6.5:1 in a 4-stroke engine would be safe, but not
in a more modern carburetted engine.
I will look this up.
You need a lubricant that remains in liquid form at quite high temperatures.
Possibly diesel fuel would mainly remain liquid right up to the flash point in air, and could lubricate the engine.
However, this is mainly injected close to tdc, and not circulated through the engine.
Small, variable compression model airplane engines could run on diesel fuel. ether, and kerosene , instead of using diluted castor oil as a lubricant.
no-one seems to use mineral oil-maybe it doesn't mix well with kerosene?
Mineral oil mixes well with methylated spirits.
****************************************************************************************
The overall objective is to remove "wet" oil emissions and smoke from the exhaust.
I have heard of "ashless" two-stroke oil, but haven't heard of it lately. I will do a search.
<edit>
Stihl synthetic says 1:50. I have been using 1:28, so maybe I will go to 1:50 once my engine is run in a bit.
1000/50 = 20 ml per litre.
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