How Two-stroke Engines Work
If you have read How Car Engines Work and How Diesel Engines Work, then you are familiar with the two types of engines found in nearly every car and truck on the road today. Both gasoline and diesel automotive engines are classified as four-stroke reciprocating internal-combustion engines.
There is a third type of engine, known as a two-stroke engine, that is commonly found in lower-power applications. Some of the devices that might have a two-stroke engine include:
Here, you'll learn all about the two-stroke engine: how it works, why it might be used and what makes it different from regular car and diesel engines.
Two-stroke Basics
This is what a two-stroke
engine looks like:
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You find two-stroke engines in such devices as chain saws and jet skis because two-stroke engines have three important advantages over four-stroke engines:
These advantages make two-stroke engines lighter, simpler and less expensive to manufacture. Two-stroke engines also have the potential to pack about twice the power into the same space because there are twice as many power strokes per revolution. The combination of light weight and twice the power gives two-stroke engines a great power-to-weight ratio compared to many four-stroke engine designs.
You don't normally see two-stroke engines in cars, however. That's because two-stroke engines have a couple of significant disadvantages that will make more sense once we look at how it operates.
The Two-stroke Cycle
The following animation
shows a two-stroke engine in action. You can compare this
animation to the animations in the car
engine and diesel
engine articles to see the differences. The biggest
difference to notice when comparing figures is that the
spark-plug fires once every revolution in a two-stroke
engine.
This figure shows a typical cross flow design. You can see that two-stroke engines are ingenious little devices that overlap operations in order to reduce the part count.
Sparks Fly
You can understand a two-stroke
engine by watching each part of the cycle. Start with the
point where the spark plug fires. Fuel and air in the
cylinder have been compressed, and when the spark plug fires
the mixture ignites. The resulting explosion drives the
piston downward. Note that as the piston moves
downward, it is compressing the air/fuel mixture in the
crankcase. As the piston approaches the bottom of its stroke,
the exhaust port is uncovered. The pressure in
the cylinder drives most of the exhaust gases out of cylinder,
as shown here:
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Fuel Intake
As the piston finally bottoms
out, the intake port is uncovered. The piston's
movement has pressurized the mixture in the crankcase,
so it rushes into the cylinder, displacing the
remaining exhaust gases and filling the cylinder with a fresh
charge of fuel, as shown here:
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Note that in many two-stroke engines that use a cross-flow design, the piston is shaped so that the incoming fuel mixture doesn't simply flow right over the top of the piston and out the exhaust port.
The Compression Stroke
Now the momentum in
the crankshaft starts driving the piston back toward the spark
plug for the compression stroke. As the air/fuel
mixture in the piston is compressed, a vacuum is
created in the crankcase. This vacuum opens the reed
valve and sucks air/fuel/oil in from the
carburetor.
Once the piston makes it to the end of the compression stroke, the spark plug fires again to repeat the cycle. It's called a two-stoke engine because there is a compression stroke and then a combustion stroke. In a four-stroke engine, there are separate intake, compression, combustion and exhaust strokes.
You can see that the piston is really doing three different things in a two-stroke engine:
It's really pretty neat to see the piston doing so many different things! That's what makes two-stroke engines so simple and lightweight.
If you have ever used a two-stroke engine, you know that you have to mix special two-stroke oil in with the gasoline. Now that you understand the two-stroke cycle you can see why. In a four-stroke engine, the crankcase is completely separate from the combustion chamber, so you can fill the crankcase with heavy oil to lubricate the crankshaft bearings, the bearings on either end of the piston's connecting rod and the cylinder wall. In a two-stroke engine, on the other hand, the crankcase is serving as a pressurization chamber to force air/fuel into the cylinder, so it can't hold a thick oil. Instead, you mix oil in with the gas to lubricate the crankshaft, connecting rod and cylinder walls. If you forget to mix in the oil, the engine isn't going to last very long!
Disadvantages of the Two-stroke
You can now
see that two-stroke engines have two important advantages over
four-stroke engines: They are simpler and lighter, and they
produce about twice as much power. So why do cars and trucks
use four-stroke
engines? There are four main reasons:
The pollution comes from two sources. The first is the combustion of the oil. The oil makes all two-stroke engines smoky to some extent, and a badly worn two-stroke engine can emit huge clouds of oily smoke. The second reason is less obvious but can be seen in the following figure:
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Each time a new charge of air/fuel is loaded into the combustion chamber, part of it leaks out through the exhaust port. That's why you see a sheen of oil around any two-stroke boat motor. The leaking hydrocarbons from the fresh fuel combined with the leaking oil is a real mess for the environment.
These disadvantages mean that two-stroke engines are used only in applications where the motor is not used very often and a fantastic power-to-weight ratio is important.
In the meantime, manufacturers have been working to shrink and lighten four-stroke engines, and you can see that research coming to market in a variety of new marine and lawn-care products.
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