Lean Combustion in a High Compression Four Stroke Gasoline Engine
810786
06/01/1981
- Event
- Content
- To achieve lean combustion in a gasoline engine, a swirl type combustion chamber is placed in the piston top. The compression swirl thereby created makes a rapid combustion possible, which is essential to a lean burn engine.The experiments are carried out with a single cylinder four stroke engine, mainly at a compression ratio of 13.8:1, and are compared to a Heron-type combustion chamber.Minimum fuel consumption is obtained at an air-fuel ratio of 19, and as an average, an improvement of approximately 5 per cent is found.The peak cylinder pressure is reduced in comparison to the Heron chamber at the same compression ratio.
- Pages
- 16
- Citation
- Herbsleb, K., Lorenzen, L., and Kofoed, E., "Lean Combustion in a High Compression Four Stroke Gasoline Engine," SAE Technical Paper 810786, 1981, https://doi.org/10.4271/810786.