going to a b:s ratio of 2.8 (from 1) allows 'only' 67% more rpm for the same acceleration of the reciprocating parts ie piston and rods
the TBO will be driven by such accelerations and related stresses, not by piston speed
piston speed issues are not a hard limit on rpm, and thereby on power
piston etc accelerations are a hard limit on rpm (and TBO), and thereby on power
(unless we have the typical 2 stroke, whose port sizes are limiting the useful rpm to a level that's quite easy on the rods etc)
imo it is laughable to imply that reciprocation stresses as drivers of TBO are not usually dominant as limiters of power
'peak' NA F1 had a much higher piston acceleration (and much lower TBO) than Nascar, but the piston speeds were the similar
anyway, high piston speed increases frictional losses
http://www.epi-eng.com/piston_engine_te ... _to_f1.htm
Honda, having used 2 rods per piston in the 1970s NR500 in reaching a then-unprecedented b:s ratio of 1.8 (safe to 23000 rpm)
in 1983 etc apparently used a further-unprecedented b:s ratio of 2.3 in the F1 V6 turbo (90x39.2) with conventional pistons and rods
the conventional 2 stroke gains more than the 4 stroke from reducing cylinder size and increasing cylinder number
because the increase in port area relative to displacement is greater
(than a similarly-treated 4 stroke's increase in valve area relative to displacement)
such an engine can have 2 or more simultaneous-firing cylinders for each of a number of common crankcases and expansion chambers
yes, this below tells me the TZ750 jackshaft is 1:1 - it's interesting in other ways, too
http://www.cycleworld.com/2016/01/18/ya ... n-insights
btw
(re assuming that the rotary valve is beneficial to all engines)
Ducati wins in Moto GP without (according to Blair) needing to use pneumatic valve actuation
NA F1 reached a VE of 130% without even using variable-length induction systems
there was a production RV-engined car in the 1920s (and a GP one ???)
and quite recently eg from Goodwood we saw 1920s Voisin double sleevevalve road and GP cars
(also Fiat and another 2 stroke GP car existed then)