- Thu Jan 07, 2016 2:29 pm
#53877
Revband - I'm puzzled because I didn't go into any science at all but you are welcome to look up Universal Gas Laws, Charles' Laws and PVT (pressure-volume-temperature) correction, they are well established laws of physics and nothing like the pseudo-science of the Cheshire Ribbon Company. It's pretty simple O-level stuff. It's what makes your motorbike work, it's not an explosion that drives your piston down but the very rapid thermal expansion of the product gases. If you quadruple the (Kelvin) temperature of the gas in there, it suddenly wants to occupy four times the volume.
Yes, I have also seen pipes glowing red hot, this is hidden by wrapping but I can assure you they still get jolly hot. On the one hand they (I'll blame Cheshire Ribbon Co.) are saying the wrap makes the pipe cooler, next they are saying it increases gas temperature. However it is not keeping the exhaust hot that aids it escaping the pipe, the gas is cooling rapidly anyway; the exhaust gas ejects itself under excess pressure as soon as its valve opens and the piston pushes the last of it out.
Stoke is ~80mm, divide that by half the time it takes to perform one revolution and you have piston velocity (assume racing at max revs, about 3 meters per second), beer mat stuff not real science. This is why trials bikes get hot, they're racing them at full chat but not getting any real air cooling, although back when I was attending it was more about negotiating a natural obstacle course than trick-cycling jumping over cardboard boxes. There was usually a lot of water cooling. I remember one event where what had been a puddle became a good size village pond and they kept ditching in it, one chap lost his bike completely in there and we had to dredge it out before someone else hit it.
Having the exhaust port glowing cherry red is not an entirely good idea. One wants to keep the combustion chamber cool to maximise thermal expansion and thus increase power output. Besides, steel gets soft glowing red around 1000°C, not good.