Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > I've got the 2 cycle bug going through me.
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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borat
Joined: Nov 10, 2007
Points: 2692
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Re: I've got the 2 cycle bug going through me.
Reply #12 Dec 7, 2011 12:15 pm |
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Excellent info Trouts. The key to two cycle engines being capable of high rpms is the fact that every upward movement is a compression stroke and every downward movement is a power stroke. On a four stroke, the exhaust stroke is throwing the piston upward with very little resistance compared to a compression stroke. The piston if flung upward with virtually no pressure on it then rapidly pulled down. This absence of pressure in both directions isn't a good thing. It's like a dog running full tilt to the end of it chain then being yanked back just as hard. The faster a four stroke engine spins, the more stress on the components such as crank, wrist pins, connecting rods and even pistons. As far as torque is concerned, I've seldom seen situations that will stall the two cycles any more readily than an equivalent powered four cycle. The main difference is how the engines respond to heavy loads. A two cycle tends to work hard and strong to a point and when it's pushed to where it will stall, revs drop rather quickly whereas a four cycle will start to bark, drop some revs then if pushed further, stall out. I find that if you have any kind of hearing, you can tell when a two cycle engine is happy. When it's happy it will outperform a four stroke of equivalent displacement and if you spin it up, there's no comparison. I had about an inch of snow on the driveway this morning so I shoveled it all to one side then went for the old Craftsman SS. We don't have much snow here and temps have been below zero F. for a couple nights so I want to put as much snow on the front lawn as possible to keep frost penetration to a minimum. The Craftsman handily threw the snow a good 25 feet or more when I put the revs to it. The fun factor shouldn't be underestimated either. It's light, powerful and effective. Nice combination under all but the most demanding situations.
This message was modified Dec 7, 2011 by borat
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RedOctobyr
Location: Lowell area, MA
Joined: Nov 5, 2011
Points: 282
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Re: I've got the 2 cycle bug going through me.
Reply #13 Dec 7, 2011 1:22 pm |
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Excellent info Trouts.
The key to two cycle engines being capable of high rpms is the fact that every upward movement is a compression stroke and every downward movement is a power stroke. On a four stroke, the exhaust stroke is throwing the piston upward with very little resistance compared to a compression stroke. The piston if flung upward with virtually no pressure on it then rapidly pulled down. This absence of pressure in both directions isn't a good thing. It's like a dog running full tilt to the end of it chain then being yanked back just as hard. The faster a four stroke engine spins, the more stress on the components such as crank, wrist pins, connecting rods and even pistons.
That's interesting, I've never heard/considered that perspective, about the piston coming up and changing direction without resistance during the exhaust stroke. I'd offer a mild "counter-argument" that it changes direction just as quickly at it bottoms out during each stroke, also not fighting any pressure. And that aspect remains the same for a 4-stoke or a 2-stroke. One difference I suppose is that the connecting rod is under compression when it changes direction at the bottom of the stroke, whereas it is in tension when doing it at the top of the stroke, for whatever difference that might make (not a whole lot, I'd think). I'd expect that a bigger contributor to the fact that 2-strokes tend to rev higher is that there is no reciprocating valve train to deal with. No valves to float, valve spring tensions to deal with, and less reciprocating mass. On the note of comparing 2-strokes to 4-strokes at the same displacement, I don't think that's quite a fair comparison. As the 2-stroke fires twice as often, they typically have a higher power/displacement ratio (maybe a 200cc 2-stroke is 6 hp, vs 4 hp for a 200cc 4-stroke, to make up numbers). Comparing engines of the same horsepower or torque would seem more fair. But I have little doubt that you can also rev up the 2-stroke substantially higher than the 4-stroke, when messing with the governor. Don't take any of this the wrong way. I think 2-strokes are interesting, and just got one that I'll hopefully get to try out this winter. Just having a discussion.
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aa335
Joined: Nov 29, 2008
Points: 2434
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Re: I've got the 2 cycle bug going through me.
Reply #20 Dec 9, 2011 11:27 am |
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I agree with jrtrebor - the Cr20 is one of the best old 2 stroke toros. The video posted there is mine.
The powerlite is OK but I like the CR20 much better :-) Not disagreeing with you guys, but trying to see how the CR20 is better. Both Powerlite and CR20 has the same size engine, curved auger. The CR20 is 20" wide, versus 16" for the Powerlite. Seems like the Powerlite should throw snow further with the chute, and the CR is much better only with slush due to the vane discharge. Is that it? Someone is listing a CR20 on CL for $250. Seems a bit high for a 20+ year old snowblower.
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