jeez.....i love how wild a tangent the simplest questions go on here , now , coming from a practicing mechanic of more than 30 yrs , i just want to set the 'piston ring gap story ' straight , now remember this is in relation to commercially produced engines be it car , motorcycle , mower , stationary etc. (home made little motors may follow some made-up wisdom of which im not aware , but the afore mentioned 'real' motors follow strict ring-gap-rules if one wants it to work , 2 stroke ring are 'pegged' as stated , to prevent interference (failure) with port edges , 4 strokes (working on the most common format of 2 compression rings & 2 oil control rings with a sprung back-up ). ring gaps are staggered to reduce/eliminate blow-by , comp. rings gaps opposite each other , at a 45 across gugeon if one was looking down on top of piston (so as to avoid thrust side of piston bearing on gap/s , barrel ground pistons are tighter in this direction too , avoid gugeon sides too as barrel ground pistons are looser in ths direction) ive tried explaining off-set piston pins previously-fell on deaf ears (it exists on all commercial pistons in spite of this), piston thrust & ovalic wear of the bore(though slight)prevent any meaningful rotation of these rings , be rather low comp. if they didnt ,likewise oil control rings same orientation but 180 off-set to the compression ring above it ,then 180 to each other , these ring have a spring pushing them out to the bore so same reason as above to not rotate (especially in relation to each other , be a huge smoke generating machine otherwise , dont worry ive seen the consequence of improper ring assembly & its not pretty),please refer any ring manufacturer & any engine repair/assembly manual to confirm this , manual will show diagram/s and a similar reasoning to above