Bri963
Well-known member
You don’t need to. Reciprocating forces in a 5 at 72 degree intervals, on a 4 at 180 degrees - 1 & 4 directly opposite 2 & 3.I'll get back to on that - I'll need to dig out a text book
You don’t need to. Reciprocating forces in a 5 at 72 degree intervals, on a 4 at 180 degrees - 1 & 4 directly opposite 2 & 3.I'll get back to on that - I'll need to dig out a text book
These are the sort of twats that opened the door for this card and “training” culture.
Do you reckon the machinery actually sorts them out in flip flop land?People like this have always and will always exist and tbh they aren't the problem. It's the fact the industry has positioned it as a dumping ground for them. In a somewhat sensible culture we wouldn't train them, we simply wouldn't allow them near machinery
probably got many times more common sense than your average droid hereDo you reckon the machinery actually sorts them out in flip flop land?
Grow wise or become part of the smelter kind of thing?
Do you reckon the machinery actually sorts them out in flip flop land?
Grow wise or become part of the smelter kind of thing?
High time the gene pool had a cleanse here...Either the machinery removes them from the gene pool or the knuckle draggers are weeded out and sent to fold raph laren and abbibas tshirts in a sweat shop, whilst the slightly more intelligent are allowed to operate 3/4's of a digger
IL 4's are easy, you can "see" it is balanced, but there are two common firing orders for IL4's (1,3,4,2 being the most common, but 1,3,2,4 cools better when you have siamese ports). The vibrations setup by the diferent firing orders are not the same.You don’t need to. Reciprocating forces in a 5 at 72 degree intervals, on a 4 at 180 degrees - 1 & 4 directly opposite 2 & 3.
Thats a bit much for me on a sunday morningYou can statically balance any engine, whether it’s one or twenty four cylinders. That isn’t the biggest problem. Once rotating a four cylinder has its offset mass just past TDC and just past BDC when combustion occurs which causes vertical forces which need to be balanced out. Easier with common rail and multi-point injection, but some mechanical counterbalancing is still required. I know myself from seeing 25 years of evolution of our fours that the mass required has been greatly reduced. However, look at a five cyl crank and you’ve never got two crank pins diametrically opposed to each other. The the distribution of mass axially is a red herring, that only has consequences for the required rigidity of the crank and every engine has a flywheel which is essentially an axially offset mass. The fact that manufacturers are dropping 5’s is down to manufacturing expenses vs limited benefits over a 4 due to improved combustion technology.
(PS, usual firing orders for a four are 1-3-4-2 and 1-2-4-3, not 1-3-2-4.)
Bit much for me any morningThats a bit much for me on a sunday morning
I think everyone who’s driven or operated something with a 5 would agree.Anyway enough about Balance, would it be agreed that a 5 cylinder lump offers a good compromise between the Torque characteristics of a 4 and a 6 ?
you can statically balance an aircraft carrier (they are!)You can statically balance any engine, whether it’s one or twenty four cylinders.
I think you'll find that is due to improvements in materials and manufacturing that allow lighter pistons, rods & gudgeons which in turn require lighter balancing mass.25 years of evolution of our fours that the mass required has been greatly reduced.
That's quite true, but is also true of every engine with an odd number of cylinderslook at a five cyl crank and you’ve never got two crank pins diametrically opposed to each other.
not at all. out-of-plane imbalance will cause rocking.the distribution of mass axially is a red herring,
It is, but the mass is evenly distributed, so it does not contribute (or compensate) for a radial out-of-balance.every engine has a flywheel which is essentially an axially offset mass
It's engines or church - pick oneThats a bit much for me on a sunday morning
Church was looking goodyou can statically balance an aircraft carrier (they are!)
Going back to basics, take a skinny motorbike wheel - when a tyre shop balances it, the weights are on (or close) to the centerline (sometimes on the spokes). That'll give you a static balance which is good enough because the wheel is narrow.
In this case, the out of balance wheel may be treated as a single point mass at a single radius, resulting in a centrifugal force: F = m ω^2 r
where ω is measured in radians.
The balancing mass and the radius may be quite different to the 'out of balance' mass, but will balance perfectly so long as the equation: m1 ω^2 r1 + m2 ω^2 r2 sums to zero.
When you go to a car-width wheel, weights are put on the inner and outer (usually at different angles) because the greater width means the dynamic component becomes significant.
Going to a multi cylinder crankshaft, you've got multiple masses at different angles on multiple planes
Borrowing from a textbook
View attachment 51489
I think you'll find that is due to improvements in materials and manufacturing that allow lighter pistons, rods & gudgeons which in turn require lighter balancing mass.
That's quite true, but is also true of every engine with an odd number of cylinders
not at all. out-of-plane imbalance will cause rocking.
It is, but the mass is evenly distributed, so it does not contribute (or compensate) for a radial out-of-balance.
The flywheel absorbs the power spikes and releases the energy more gently to smooth the power delivery
It's engines or church - pick one![]()
Your not the only one. In fact I’m a bit lost what we’re arguing about here.
We had a 6 come off test with a hole in the piston, so effectively it was a 5 and that one ran a bit rougher than the 4’s.Your not the only one
But all I know is the 5cyl T5 TDI was damn site better than the 4cyl T6 pile of shite
Would a V8 with two holed pistons be any smoother than a 4 ?We had a 6 come off test with a hole in the piston, so effectively it was a 5 and that one ran a bit rougher than the 4’s.