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British Bikes / Re: Tiger cub valve timing.
« Last post by cardan on Today at 03:00:01 AM »Hi Keith,
You could certainly give it a go.
The inlet valve closes when it does because someone at the factory has determined that this is the point, when running "normally", that gets the most mixture into the cylinder. For a sporty little engine like the Cub the inlet closes quite late, because running at higher revs there's a lot of intertia of the gas flowing from the inlet port into the engine. So the cylinder keeps filling even though the piston is moving UP the cylinder on the compression stroke.
Cub timing figures attached, from www.triumphrat.net/attachments/cub-useful-data-page-with-timin-specs-1966-jpg.755483/
At starting, the engine is spinning very slowly. Let's imagine that we turn it really slowly, say by hand. Letting the inlet valve close later will mean that the piston is slightly higher up the bore before the inlet valve closes - the extra volume of gas (equal to the distance up the stroke times the area of the piston) has been pushed backwards out the inlet valve, so the amount of gas to be compressed is less. We could calculate it, but I really doubt it could make too much difference to the compression on the first rotation of the engine. Once spinning, the gas flow is a very dynamic thing and depends on all sorts of stuff I'm not qualified to talk about!
What it will almost certainly do is cause blow-back through the carb when the engine is running.
But give it a go and let us know how you get on. Good luck!
Leon
You could certainly give it a go.
The inlet valve closes when it does because someone at the factory has determined that this is the point, when running "normally", that gets the most mixture into the cylinder. For a sporty little engine like the Cub the inlet closes quite late, because running at higher revs there's a lot of intertia of the gas flowing from the inlet port into the engine. So the cylinder keeps filling even though the piston is moving UP the cylinder on the compression stroke.
Cub timing figures attached, from www.triumphrat.net/attachments/cub-useful-data-page-with-timin-specs-1966-jpg.755483/
At starting, the engine is spinning very slowly. Let's imagine that we turn it really slowly, say by hand. Letting the inlet valve close later will mean that the piston is slightly higher up the bore before the inlet valve closes - the extra volume of gas (equal to the distance up the stroke times the area of the piston) has been pushed backwards out the inlet valve, so the amount of gas to be compressed is less. We could calculate it, but I really doubt it could make too much difference to the compression on the first rotation of the engine. Once spinning, the gas flow is a very dynamic thing and depends on all sorts of stuff I'm not qualified to talk about!
What it will almost certainly do is cause blow-back through the carb when the engine is running.
But give it a go and let us know how you get on. Good luck!
Leon
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