3Pedals
Automotive
- Oct 18, 2020
- 3
I have a question concerning replacement piston design and flame front in my 1924 Dodge Brothers L-head engine. The engine was designed with 4:1 compression and a massive 297 cc combustion chamber. The factory piston rises from the deck by 0.115" at TDC. The spark plug is directly over the intake valve, and the 4 cylinder engine produces 37 hp. I am designing a higher compression replacement piston and don't want to make an error or create problems. The goal is only 50-60 hp with a modern piston design and thoughtful cam re-grind.
I have thoroughly modeled the combustion chamber and have a pop-up design that fits well and increases the CR to approximately 5.8:1 by increasing the compression distance of the piston by 0.625" while leaving 0.100" plus the head gasket thickness, estimated at 0.050" min., of piston to head clearance (0.150" total). The piston would now rise to 0.740" above the deck. Knowing that the flame front is coming from the side and that the entire crown of the piston is parallel to the top of the CC, I've chosen to avoid creating a quench situation. At 0.100" of total Piston to head clearance I get 6:1 CR, which was my target.
Does anyone have insight on piston to head clearance in this type of configuration? Milling the head is not an option. Also, the CC surface is a rough cast. Perhaps polishing the chambers could aid in charge heat retention and propagation, and might be advantageous in reducing carbon buildup. Am I playing with fire? (pun intended)
I have thoroughly modeled the combustion chamber and have a pop-up design that fits well and increases the CR to approximately 5.8:1 by increasing the compression distance of the piston by 0.625" while leaving 0.100" plus the head gasket thickness, estimated at 0.050" min., of piston to head clearance (0.150" total). The piston would now rise to 0.740" above the deck. Knowing that the flame front is coming from the side and that the entire crown of the piston is parallel to the top of the CC, I've chosen to avoid creating a quench situation. At 0.100" of total Piston to head clearance I get 6:1 CR, which was my target.
Does anyone have insight on piston to head clearance in this type of configuration? Milling the head is not an option. Also, the CC surface is a rough cast. Perhaps polishing the chambers could aid in charge heat retention and propagation, and might be advantageous in reducing carbon buildup. Am I playing with fire? (pun intended)