- Joined
- Jan 12, 2025
- Messages
- 58
Dogma is that in piston engines which are operating normally the rings slowly rotate around the pistons. I'm not entirely clear on why, but evidently there is a net force (let's call it the driving force) tangent to the ring edge (in the plane of the ring), so it rotates. Until it gets stuck, then it doesn't rotate. The rings rotating probably plays some role in keeping the ring lands clean. Typically when one piece of metal rubs over another it will have the effect of knocking loose whatever substances are sticking to them, or breaking those substances down through a shearing action. I could not find any discussion of this hypothetical rotational cleaning action though. Perhaps it is negligible?
Anyway, this makes me wonder about how and when exactly rings seize up. One model would be that when the motor turns off, once nothing is moving, oil and combustion related substances cool and bind tightly to the piston and ring, so that at the next startup the driving force isn't sufficient to rotate the ring. Another model would be that the oil and combustion related substances accumulate while the motor is in operation, slowing the ring rotation, which lets more accumulate, until the ring finally gets stuck even though the motor is operating. It could be one, it could be the other, it could be both. Anybody know?
If the second model is important it suggests that designing the motor to increase the driving force would decrease the rate at which rings stick. Since I don't understand what is providing the driving force in the first place it is hard to say how to increase it. Although, since piston bores are usually honed with what are essentially both right and left handed riflings of very shallow depth, employing just one handedness of rifling at a shallow angle very close to parallel to the bore axis might cause the rings to oscillate back and forth a degree or two on each stroke, rather than rotate. Probably it would mess up the seal though, since I'm confident it is done the way it is now for a very good reason.
Anyway, this makes me wonder about how and when exactly rings seize up. One model would be that when the motor turns off, once nothing is moving, oil and combustion related substances cool and bind tightly to the piston and ring, so that at the next startup the driving force isn't sufficient to rotate the ring. Another model would be that the oil and combustion related substances accumulate while the motor is in operation, slowing the ring rotation, which lets more accumulate, until the ring finally gets stuck even though the motor is operating. It could be one, it could be the other, it could be both. Anybody know?
If the second model is important it suggests that designing the motor to increase the driving force would decrease the rate at which rings stick. Since I don't understand what is providing the driving force in the first place it is hard to say how to increase it. Although, since piston bores are usually honed with what are essentially both right and left handed riflings of very shallow depth, employing just one handedness of rifling at a shallow angle very close to parallel to the bore axis might cause the rings to oscillate back and forth a degree or two on each stroke, rather than rotate. Probably it would mess up the seal though, since I'm confident it is done the way it is now for a very good reason.