Comments by "Keit Hammleter" (@keithammleter3824) on "New Mind" channel.

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  5.  @DoktorBayerischeMotorenWerke  You have things backwards and also have some misconceptions. High swirl, because of the reduction and even out of temperature within the combustion space, reduces the tendency to pre-ignite and allow you to increase the compression ratio in gasoline engines - which may increase power output and partly, but not wholly, compensate for the increase heat conduction. high swirl means high heat loss as it thins the boundary ("Carrier") layer - the layer of substantially non-moving gas adhering to surfaces. It is why combustion can reach white heat yet the head doesn't melt even if aluminium. Non-moving gas is a heat insulator. In diesel engines pre-ignition cannot occur, and so bowl-in-piston designs are still dominant. As I said earlier, bowl-in-piston design is an equally performing alternative to hemi-head. But it transfers more heat to the piston instead of the head, so it has only been used in small car engines (eg Ford Cortina) and in turbo engines where the piston needs to spray oil cooled anyway - as in modern diesels. Wedge head designs, along with bathtubs, were a feature of 1950's engines as they similarly reduce pre-ignition and make the engine non--critical in tuning. A pent-roof is essentially a hemi. The modern use of 4 valves as large as possible with only one or 2 camshafts forces the top surfaces to be somewhat flat, and this has led to marketing people calling it pent-roof. The large area devoted to valves improves breathing and thus power output at high RPM but does nothing for efficiency. It is all very well to keep saying apex seals are prone to failure, however it is a fact that Mazda have achieved acceptable seal life.
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