manolis wrote:Hello Gruntugu.
I think the same method is used in the pinnacle engine (a four-cycle Opposed Piston with two crankshafts): they use an intake sleeve valve at one side of the cylinder and an exhaust sleeve valve at the other side of the cylinder, each opening and closing ports disposed near the middle of the cylinder.
They claim their system works fine.
The next reasonable question: if the sealing with the ring-less sleeve valve is good and the relative friction/wear low, why this technology was never used to eliminate the piston rings in normal size engines?
For the high quantity of residual gas: in order the fresh gas to escape out of the cylinder, the shortest way is obvious (short circuit of transfer / exhaust ports). In the giant 2-stroke marine engines a lot of effort is given in the reduction of the residual gas. Is there something special in the design of Crecy that forces the hot gas in the “cave” above the exhaust ports to exit from the cylinder?
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos
Manolis,
The Bristol & Napier sleeves which extended higher than those used by the Crecy,
had rings to seal against the junk head ( & perform heat transfer),
& their sleeves also move in a wrist like rotational as well as vertical plane..
..at 1/2 the speed of the Crecy sleeves - being 4-strokes..
The Crecy was referred to as a "Sprint" engine, for use in high speed fighter aircraft,
& was fairly energetically blown, indeed its exhaust jet thrust efflux was a to be a
considerable contribution to the design speed of the aircraft it powered..