ringo wrote: ↑13 Jan 2018, 18:06
Would be funny if the engine was a 3 valve engine, with the freed up room in the cylinder head going to a central direct injection system.
Mercedes have been doing 3 valve engines for some time, would they be bold enough to use it in a race engine?
5.1.8 Engines must have two inlet and two exhaust valves per cylinder.
Only reciprocating poppet valves with axial displacement are permitted.
The sealing interface between the moving valve component and the stationary engine
component must be circular.
Interesting to note that injector and combustion chamber design is almost unregulated. One could imagine a mechanical, cam-driven component having an interplay with the supposed pre-chamber systems. Such a 'fifth-valve' would still constitute a component of the fuel injector.
It could open and close the pre-chamber. This would provide discrete volumes for fuel injection moments without modifying the the solenoid driven components of the fuel injector.
For example:
- three injector puffs during the first part of the intake stroke while the prechamber valve is open.
- prechamber valve closes during mid/latter part of the intake stroke, and two more injector puffs while the prechamber is closed
leading to...
- spark ignition within the prechamber
- prechamber valve forced open releasing flame front into the homogenously mixed main combustion chamber at/near TDC.
...or the prechamber valve could simply reopen again just prior to ignition.
There is a limited number of injection events permitted per stroke. I'm not sure what that number is--I believe less than ten.
Its small size and inertia could allow unusual cam lobe profiles. Downside to what I proposed is exposure of the prechamber valve guide to combustion.
But all this is byzantine and dubiously useful. There could be other ways to achieve a variable geometry prechamber toward benefit, without violating the rules of what constitutes a fuel injector, intake & exhaust valves, and maintaining a fixed combustion chamber volume (although, swept volume is how engine displacement is defined in the regs, so even a variable volume combustion chamber should still be legal).
A while back I proposed to have a pin/plug/dowel that could impose or recede within the combustion chamber to alter final compression ratios and help control knock. Depending on its position, it could alter compression/decompression slopes independent of piston travel. Compression ignition could be turned on/off, if they're right on the limit of such modes. Supplemental to spark and TJI: insertion of a sufficiently voluminous body into the combustion chamber could be another method of initiating combustion via increasing the compression-ratio at the right moment. Or maybe there would simply be benefit to being able to slight alter CR at will.