firing intervals are nothing to do with engine vibration ie vibration transmitted to the vehiclesaviour stivala wrote: ↑10 Feb 2022, 10:21.. Why design otherwise (an even number of cylinders in a row) when at design stage one can already achieve less vibration and provide for more even pressure pulses in the exhaust ....
they are to do with torsional vibration within the crankshaft - this isn't transmitted to the vehicle
different pistons in a radial must travel different distances, angles etc - so can never prevent all engine vibration
yes eg each cylinder capacity etc is different to its neighbours
regardless of whether cylinder quantity is even or odd
(here the 10 cylinder Smith Static is praised for its lack of vibration)
https://www.airwar1.org.uk/american%20s ... engine.htm
the benefits to the crankshaft designer of odd numbers are less with a larger quantity of cylinders
and eg crankshaft design deficiencies obtained in Armstrong Siddeley 3x7 and 4x7 engines
crankshaft expert Tresilian was brought in - he designed a 4x6 engine (the 1941 Wolfhound) - it was given to RR
(his F1 BRM engine had 4 main bearings and 1 counterweight - till BRM redesigned it and increased its bearing losses)
the V and the radial were expected to merge into a multi-bank multi-row ohc type of engine
the Hydra the Chieftain and the Wolfhound were part of this movement
only the Hydra crankshaft design was deficient (because it had no centre bearing)
computer-savvy people can now armchair-design radials and see their inherent geometrical discrepancies .....
inherent regardless of cylinder count
the vibration consequences of these discrepancies of course reduced by 2 row engines having 180 deg crankshafts