Any ideas or input on these?
I honestly have no idea. Maybe it's a spot for holding oil? I don't know what that is but it doesn't look like an automotive engine, so auto emission rules don't apply. Looks air cooled? might be to increase oiling under high temperature conditions? reduce piston seizing under extreme temperatures?
Big cylinder? is that for aircraft?
Reduced friction surface areaI agree with the above. I can think of no other reason for the dimples than holding oil.
I'm thinking something without pressure lubrication-- air compressor or some other kind of pump?
Miniature dents at the inside of the fan frame create a turbulent boundary layer when the fan blades pass by. With the tips of the fan blades ploughing through this boundary layer, flow separation from the suction side of the blades is significantly reduced
My TP is dimpled for the same reasonsThat's to shed the water from your laundry while it's on spin-cycle
I think it was here or on one of the engine tech sites that just had an LSJ article about dimpled piston rings available from Total Seal.
Great link! Fascinating that they tried DLC coatings with texturing, and saw a high speed improvement of nearly 6%. When we struggle for a small increase, that kind of improvement is stunning.
https://www.myscorecard.com/blog/?p=1278.
From Mythbusters,
At constant 65 mph speed, the cleaner car gave 26 MPG and the dimpled one gave an amazing 29 MPG.