Model Engine Maker
Help! => Specific Engine Help => Topic started by: grizelli on January 20, 2014, 07:37:31 PM
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Apologies if this has been covered before. I am building my first engine, a 2 stroke single-cylinder of my own design and I need to find some way to stop the piston rings from rotating in the cylinder to prevent the ends poking into the ports and snapping off. The only way that I have thought of so far is to fit a small peg in the ring groove and file a corresponding recess in the back of the ring - however, the rings are around 19mm diameter and only 1 mm wide so I can see this becoming a bit of a trial, with lots of broken bits of ring all over the floor. Are there any other methods that I could try, or am I being over-cautious?
Thanks for any help.
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hi mate just make sure your pegs are opposite side of the piston , the peg only needs to be .2 to.5 of a mm high then just carefully file a step on one side of your gap at the back , that way it will not weaken the ring do this before heat treating good luck ian c
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ps I mean the back of the ring :headscratch:
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Thanks Ian, that's what I had planned to do but I was hoping that there might be a less fiddly way. Lazy, that's me :-)
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the only other way I have seen is a peg flush with the o/d of the piston and a shorter ring ,but it has to be a very good fit , ian
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Well, I did one of the pistons today, and apart from the poor combination of bad eyesight, fat fingers and 1mm diameter pins, it seemed to work. I ended up pressing the pins in and then carefully trimmed them to length with a cutting disc in a Dremel. I guess I'll find out if it works if/when the engine starts and has been running for a while....
Thanks again for your help