Is this wht you're talking about?
http://www.stradsplace.com/VIDEOS/Match ... typing.mpg
I can’t open Strad’s example so this may be redundant. Porsche stuck a rotatible mirror up the cylinder and use a laser for the internal head-to-block weld. I don’t recall for sure but maybe the 962 which would be water cooled.langwadt wrote:I believe Porsche welded the heads on some of their engines, aircooled I guessmatt21 wrote:You don´t have to deal with head bolts and a gasket. But you have to machine the valve seats from below. Brian Hart has this done on his turbo engine.Wideband mindeD wrote:1. What benefits, if any, would a mono-block engine have over regular ICE design?
Your original question had nothing in it about rapid prototyping.Wideband mindeD wrote:Has anyone actually read what I asked? Or are you just thrilled to go off on a valve seat tangent.
This thread is about the future of 3D printed objects, including a self contained, single piece engine. NO ASSEMBLY, just installation.
What design compromises are done away with if you didn't require assembly in post production?
i do not see the costs to come down to such an extend that you can use one engine per session. I think in minimum it has to last for one weekend.Wideband mindeD wrote:Costs would come way down, and using an engine per session will not matter.
Your questions were too 'hypothetical' for the interests of most the current posters. You need a better understanding of the forum that you are posting on to get the results you want.Wideband mindeD wrote:Sorry people, I thought you were better than you turned out to be. My bad.
Casting and rapid prototyping are very different things. Also some parts of the engine are forged (pistons...), for very good reasons.Wideband mindeD wrote:I did start this thread asking what would change if an engine were to be made as a single piece, with all pieces "cast" in place.
How, for example, do you propose to print an alloy in a certain microstructure? controlled cooling from liquid? (especially when it's right next to another material) or maybe printing atom by atom? (possible using an ion gun, but would take a while)Wideband mindeD wrote: The metallurgy is part of the development that will take place over the next 10 or so years.
The pistons bearing on the crankpin could be made much lighter,requiring smaller crankshaft counterweights (therefore lowering vibration).Wideband mindeD wrote: My question is "What design compromises/philosophies change if you can print fully assembled engines?" Would it create a more efficient engine?
This is what I was after... I'm not really interested in the single point failures that need to be overcome, as much as I am interested in the differences that we would see.superdread wrote:Casting and rapid prototyping are very different things. Also some parts of the engine are forged (pistons...), for very good reasons.Wideband mindeD wrote:I did start this thread asking what would change if an engine were to be made as a single piece, with all pieces "cast" in place.
How, for example, do you propose to print an alloy in a certain microstructure? controlled cooling from liquid? (especially when it's right next to another material) or maybe printing atom by atom? (possible using an ion gun, but would take a while)Wideband mindeD wrote: The metallurgy is part of the development that will take place over the next 10 or so years.
The pistons bearing on the crankpin could be made much lighter,requiring smaller crankshaft counterweights (therefore lowering vibration).Wideband mindeD wrote: My question is "What design compromises/philosophies change if you can print fully assembled engines?" Would it create a more efficient engine?
Saving the bolt connections between cylinder heads, block and crankcase. would save a bit of weight.
The packaging doesn't get tighter, the bolts have a structural role that needs to be replaced (still more weight efficient).Wideband mindeD wrote: No bolts, no gaskets, no leaks, tighter packaging, better block stability... That is where my interest lies, and what conventions would change.
I don't get the impression that you understand the importance of microstructure of a material, and the problem of recreating it in a way that could be called printing.Wideband mindeD wrote: PS: And yes, printing them in place, even with the difficulties of getting the durability from forgings into a printable form. I can see a clear path of development to precisely answer those issues. I am not really concerned about what the engineers are going to do to overcome these obstacles, simply in what changes when this tech becomes available.
Because you don't need the bolts that connect the fork to the thing on the other side.richard_leeds wrote:Why would the pistons bearing on the crankpin get lighter?
I guess the reason for tighter packaging is not needing to create space for bolt holes?
Selective deposition has been about for some years now at submicon levels.superdread wrote:That reminds me, replicating a µm coating will be another hurdle.
How?Gatecrasher wrote:Selective deposition has been about for some years now at submicon levels.superdread wrote:That reminds me, replicating a µm coating will be another hurdle.