Route666
Active Member
65shelby, no need to get steamed, even if certain others are poking with the proverbial stick.
The way it works is that yes the combustion chamber never "changes", but it's always there. There is the swept volume of 600, but there isn't a void left in the combustion chamber, that 60cc still has stuff in it, whether it be left over exhaust byproduct from the last stroke or fresh air/fuel from the new stroke as overlap cleans out the cylinder.
Your example works for 10:1 if the 60cc combustion chamber is included in your cylinder volume, but cylinder volume includes the stroked volume, gasket volume, piston deck clearance volume, piston releif volume, and them combustion chamber. In the simple version it includes the basics - stroked volume and combustion chamber. The way you explained it with 600 at bottom of stroke and 0 at top equates to just the stroked volume. 600 at bottom and 60 at top is the 10:1 you are talking about.
The way it works is that yes the combustion chamber never "changes", but it's always there. There is the swept volume of 600, but there isn't a void left in the combustion chamber, that 60cc still has stuff in it, whether it be left over exhaust byproduct from the last stroke or fresh air/fuel from the new stroke as overlap cleans out the cylinder.
Your example works for 10:1 if the 60cc combustion chamber is included in your cylinder volume, but cylinder volume includes the stroked volume, gasket volume, piston deck clearance volume, piston releif volume, and them combustion chamber. In the simple version it includes the basics - stroked volume and combustion chamber. The way you explained it with 600 at bottom of stroke and 0 at top equates to just the stroked volume. 600 at bottom and 60 at top is the 10:1 you are talking about.

