Martin Keene wrote: ↑08 Jan 2024, 12:55
saviour stivala wrote: ↑07 Jan 2024, 02:48
An engine 'bedplate' is forever associated with marine and stationary engines of considerable size. When a 'bedplate' design is used, the crankshaft is installed into it with removable bearing caps which are bolted onto it and not into the "framebox'/cylinder blog. It, the 'bedplate' with the crankshaft mounted into it supports the 'framebox', the 'framebox' might contain or not the cylinder frame. In formula one where no separate removable bearing caps are used, common terms used are the 'lower sump', and the "upper sump".
I wonder if we are talking about different things. This is what I mean by a bed-plate design:
https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/imag ... A&usqp=CAU
All of the bearing caps and cast into a single piece that forms the bottom half of the cylinder block. Kohler refers to it as a bedplate in their brochure and that is what that design of cylinder block is know as in the off highway industry.
No we are not talking about different things, the problem is the thing called 'BED-PLATE', the one you are showing (KOHLER PHOTO), that yes, it contains the crankshaft lower bearing halves, YES you are right that it is referred to as a 'BED-PLATE', but it is different from the lower part of the formula 1 engine called the 'LOWER SUMP', The difference is the formula 1 lower sump not only also contains the lower half crank main bearing but it also is closed bottom, meaning it catches/contains the oil inside it, that is before the oil is scavenged. The one you show is called a 'BED-PLAT' because the lower half main bearings are cast in, it is not called a lower sump because it has an open bottom which is closed by a normal sump. The other type of 'BED-PLATE' I was originally talking about is also closed bottom and apart from lower main bearing halves being cast or built-in, the crankshaft is held into it by removable main bearing caps bolted down onto it and it completely supports the engine.