Cddeshon
Member
In another thread I was asked to provide better pictures/videos of the engines in my avatar. I’ll attempt to do that with this thread.
These are my three Otto Langen atmospheric Internal Combustion Engines I’ve built. The Otto Langen atmospheric engine was designed and built by Nicolaus Otto and Eugen Langen back in 1860’s. They are the first commercially successful I.C. engines to be built and several thousand were built in the decade that followed until Nicolaus Otto perfected his 4-cycle engine. These are non-compression engines that use the combustion of fuel to lift a piston against atmospheric pressure, and then reclaim that energy by the atmosphere pressing the piston back down the cylinder and performing useful work.
The model on the left is the first one I built; back in 2013. I knew very little of these engines back then and it took me several years to get it to run properly. It runs on acetylene and was loosely modeled from a line diagram I had of the original built by Otto. Since then, drawings of the original have become available. The engine runs as an ungoverned engine as the first built by Otto did. It is mostly of cast iron construction. Though the full size uses flame ignition, at 1/5th size, flame ignition does not scale, therefore the model uses spark ignition. This model has been to the Cabin Fever expo in Lebanon Pennsylvania a few times and also several times to the Rough and Tumble engineers August show.
The model in the middle is a third generation Otto Langen and is a fairly accurate representation of the Crossley built Otto Langen owned by the Henry Ford Museum and on loan to the Rough and Tumble engineers association in Kinzer, Pa. Through the friendly folks at Rough and Tumble was able I to get many photos and dimensions of the full size and for that reason the model closely resembles the full size. The model has a functional hand start lever and runs “on the governor” like the full size.
The engine on the right is another model of the 3rd generation Maybach re-design of the Otto Langen mechanism. I designed and built this model using erection drawings of an 1871 full-size engine built by Gasmotorenfabrik-deutz, supplied by a friend. This model also closely models the full size. It too is governor controlled and is the last Otto Langen model I’ve completed.
I’m currently building a fourth model, this one a 2nd generation Otto Langen, modeled from an engine on exhibit in Oslo, Norway. This will be a model of a 2 HP engine with dual flywheels and will also be governor controlled.
All my engines run on acetylene.
These are my three Otto Langen atmospheric Internal Combustion Engines I’ve built. The Otto Langen atmospheric engine was designed and built by Nicolaus Otto and Eugen Langen back in 1860’s. They are the first commercially successful I.C. engines to be built and several thousand were built in the decade that followed until Nicolaus Otto perfected his 4-cycle engine. These are non-compression engines that use the combustion of fuel to lift a piston against atmospheric pressure, and then reclaim that energy by the atmosphere pressing the piston back down the cylinder and performing useful work.
The model on the left is the first one I built; back in 2013. I knew very little of these engines back then and it took me several years to get it to run properly. It runs on acetylene and was loosely modeled from a line diagram I had of the original built by Otto. Since then, drawings of the original have become available. The engine runs as an ungoverned engine as the first built by Otto did. It is mostly of cast iron construction. Though the full size uses flame ignition, at 1/5th size, flame ignition does not scale, therefore the model uses spark ignition. This model has been to the Cabin Fever expo in Lebanon Pennsylvania a few times and also several times to the Rough and Tumble engineers August show.
The model in the middle is a third generation Otto Langen and is a fairly accurate representation of the Crossley built Otto Langen owned by the Henry Ford Museum and on loan to the Rough and Tumble engineers association in Kinzer, Pa. Through the friendly folks at Rough and Tumble was able I to get many photos and dimensions of the full size and for that reason the model closely resembles the full size. The model has a functional hand start lever and runs “on the governor” like the full size.
The engine on the right is another model of the 3rd generation Maybach re-design of the Otto Langen mechanism. I designed and built this model using erection drawings of an 1871 full-size engine built by Gasmotorenfabrik-deutz, supplied by a friend. This model also closely models the full size. It too is governor controlled and is the last Otto Langen model I’ve completed.
I’m currently building a fourth model, this one a 2nd generation Otto Langen, modeled from an engine on exhibit in Oslo, Norway. This will be a model of a 2 HP engine with dual flywheels and will also be governor controlled.
All my engines run on acetylene.
Last edited: