Internal Combustion Engine

(ciechanow.ski)

108 points | by StefanBatory 4 hours ago

7 comments

  • bob1029 26 minutes ago
    > Presence of oil is critical here as it creates conditions for hydrodynamic lubrication.

    You can hear this effect in some vehicles at initial startup time for a few seconds. I know of certain Ford engines where it actually causes issues over time. The model years with auto start/stop have the worst of the cam rattle disease.

  • CraigJPerry 16 minutes ago
    The thing that's missing here that really drastically changes the story is all the emissions control hardware that would exist on such an engine.

    This is a circa 1990s engine in the US market i think? Dual Overhead Cam didn't really become popular in the US market until then i think. 70s-80s for single overhead cam to become established.

    The diagrams are beautiful and informative as always from this author.

  • fauria 17 minutes ago
    "in real running engines the rotating crankshaft should float completely on a very thin surface of oil" - I found this to be a great insight.
  • felooboolooomba 1 hour ago
    Pro tip: Show a message if WebGL is disabled instead of a blank space.
  • mrhottakes 1 hour ago
    Excellent animations.
    • misiek08 33 minutes ago
      You meant - awful knocking combustion in the first, main animation? I never catches any real bug is those great posts, but this one, especially as first animation on the page - weird.
  • bell-cot 3 hours ago
    [2021] Originally 2333 points and 392 comments:

    https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26991300

  • zuzululu 28 minutes ago
    [flagged]