Originally Posted by CR94
If lubrication by gasoline (or additives in it) plays a significant role in minimizing upper-cylinder wear, how can engines fueled by natural gas last as long as they do?
Quite there son !! Don't ruin their day.
In all seriousness I fail to see how atomized fuel injected milliseconds prior to ignition can "wash" anything. On top of that today's engines even after tens of thousands of miles still reveal honing marks in the cylinder wall.
If lubrication by gasoline (or additives in it) plays a significant role in minimizing upper-cylinder wear, how can engines fueled by natural gas last as long as they do?
Quite there son !! Don't ruin their day.
In all seriousness I fail to see how atomized fuel injected milliseconds prior to ignition can "wash" anything. On top of that today's engines even after tens of thousands of miles still reveal honing marks in the cylinder wall.