
 Originally Posted by 
Brian Hjelm
					 
				 
				J.......
 Gnome and Le Rhone variants used different bores and strokes in the 80hp. engines.
The early Gnome engines used an automatic inlet valve in the piston. These were poorly cooled and tended to fail, with the possibility of igniting the mixture in the crankcase, with disastrous results. The Monosoupape, or singlevalve, had only the valve in the head of the cylinder. During the exhaust stroke it operated as an exhaust valve, exhausting into the open air as there was no manifold. As the intake stroke started, the valve remained open, enabling the cylinder to partly fill with air, until about half way down it closed, so pressure in the cylinder dropped. close to the bottom of the stroke a transfer port opened, allowing the rich mixture in crankcase to enter and mix with the air. This was then compressed, firing as usual close to TDC, followed by the power stroke. The valve was opened well before the end of the power stroke to allow pressure to drop so that burnt gases did not transfer to the crankcase (or not much anyway). The rich mixture ensured the crankcase contents could not ignite.
These engines were very light weight, the 80hp Le Rhone weighing only 199lbs. and the 160hp. Gnome weighing only 340lbs.
Not often mentioned is the major advantage of rotary engines - no vibration, as they were perfectly balanced, with no reciprocating parts except the valve gear; this allowed the airframe to be much lighter and avoided a lot of other problems. By comparison, in line engines of the period tended to vibrate badly, and stationary radial engines, as was found by experience, have a whole suite of strange vibration modes, which made them virtually unuseable until these were understood in the early twenties.
........, and would probably need CNC capacity.
My father spent the war making (and later making tooling for) Merlin engines - CNC had not been invented, so it is difficult to see why it would be needed to make a model.
			
		 
	
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