Hello J.A.W.
You write:
“Not quite Manolis..
For example - see the Mercury 2T outboard 'Optimax' system that has run the Orbital DFI for years..
& the 2T mopeds built by Piaggio also continue using the Orbital DFI tech, don't they?”
We say the same thing.
The initial “Great Expectations” from the Orbital technology, i.e. to replace the 4-stroke engine in every application and size, proved totally wrong.
The very few and “marginal” applications are disproportional to the several millions of dollars invested to the “Orbital” technology, to the thousands of patents granted to Orbital, and to the thousands of relative articles written in the press worldwide.
The question is actually about the Rotax (Bombardier / Evinrude) E-TEC technology.
The 600 E-TEC and 800E-TEC engines (and now the 850E-TEC) are engines already in mass production: they are used in snowmobiles.
Why they never put such an engine on a motorcycle or on a car?
Any clue?
Back to the PatATeco.
This arrangement has 4-stroke lubrication and a scraper ring in the middle of the piston:
The middle-left and the right ports feed the cylinder with air during the scavenging
The middle-left port on the cylinder feeds also the space underside the piston crown with compressed air after the end of the scavenging.
The fuel is injected more than 90 crankshaft degrees before the BDC, though the middle-left cylinder port, towards the right half of the space underside the piston crown, wherein it evaporates into the air forming a rich mixture that waits the asymmetric transfer port (middle-right) to open.
The lubrication of the compression rings is unconventional and interesting:
Look at the lowest position of the second compression ring as it slides along the cylinder liner: it goes a little lower than the ports.
Then look at the highest position of the oil scraper ring as it slides along the cylinder liner: its path ends just below the ports.
This way when the piston is at its BDC the second compression ring abuts whereon, 180 crankshaft degrees earlier, the oil scraper ring was abutting and lubricating the cylinder liner.
I hope it is clearer now how it works
Thanks
Manolis Pattakos