Time for a new Horizontal Hit and Miss engine

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Brian Rupnow

Design Engineer
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I'm a bit bored today. Not a lot, but winter's coming. I've played with my v-twin engine until I've reached a point where it will run like crazy at mid range speeds, but doesn't respond well to slowing down, not for that matter to speeding up. I think I am going to put it away for a while, and come back to it later. I have enough stock "in house" to build a pair of 4 1/2" flywheels. I would like to run a 1" bore, not because it would have more power, but because at 1" bore I can use a 3/8" thread sparkplug which I can purchase from a local automotive store. If I use a 3/4" bore, then I can only fit in a 1/4" sparkplug. I have my own complete set of 24 DP gear cutters, and may opt to use a 25 tooth and a 50 tooth set of timing gears. Probably go for a 1 1/4" stroke, maybe 1 3/8". I would build my own mixer (carburetor). Air cooled is the easiest route for me to go, but I would design it to also use a water jacket, because since I sell these drawings I am sure people would like to have a choice. I don't think I would put a fan on this one, because if the hit and miss cycles are working properly, the engine will pump enough air through during the miss cycles that it will run pretty cool anyways. Brass, in any size, has become so terribly expensive that other than some trim pieces the engine would primarily be made from steel and aluminum. Cast iron cylinder sleeve and cast iron piston. Paint is still cheap as dirt, and if done properly can really give some eye appeal to an engine. I won't be cutting metal for a while yet, but I get excited thinking about the design stage.
 
After having a good look at the cam gear mounted governor, I prefer the Breisch Olds style to the Chinese style of governor. The Breisch style has ample movement at 0.148" and looks simpler to me.
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The cam gear will be a bit complex. It will have the mounting points for the governor pivot shaft, a section of hub, and a cam machined onto the face of the hub. With an oilite bushing pressed into the center, it can be supported on the side of the engine frame by a shoulder bolt. There will be no camshaft, as the intake valve will be atmospheric and not depend on a cam to open it.
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Will be following along, again, Keep up the great work, love the problem solving.
Cheers
Andrew
 
Well, at the end of the day, I have everything except exhaust, carburetor, and the actual components that make it hit and miss. The exhaust and carb will be mainly copy and paste operations. Vietti--It's horizontal mainly because I like the look of a horizontal more than a vertical. I've managed to kill a whole day here. Good wife is away to a funeral today and won't be home until later this evening. Time to go find a good book to read and grab some supper now.
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I had to do a bit of rearranging. I had the large cam gear above the centerline of the crankshaft so it would line up with the top valve on the cylinder head, which is the exhaust. I didn't like the look of it though, because too much gear was showing. Allright--I'll move the big gear to a point below the crankshaft, and line it up with the bottom intake valve---and then I'll be tricky and put the rocker arm and mounts on the cylinder head at an angle so that it will still operate the exhaust valve. That pretty well does it for the major design. A ton of bolt clearance holes and threaded holes to be added, but that is fairly simple stuff. I haven't thought much about a gas tank location yet, but will probably do that next.
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I've decided to make the 60 tooth gear and the cam as two separate pieces and then pin and solder them together. This is the absolute fastest way to make a cam. When there is no need to make a machined flank on the cam (because the cam follower is a bearing) I can rattle one of these off using first the lathe, then the rotary table on my milling machine in less than an hour.
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Just looked at my old Stover 1 1/2 HP engine, set up is like your drawing, but exhaust is on the side and of course has a magneto trip lever
and is water cooled...
 
After doing a lot of research, I have found a governor which gives a much stronger reaction and takes up no space on the outside of the engine frame, allowing the flywheels to set in closer to the center of the engine. This governor is very similar to a flyball governor and sets inside the engine frame and just clears the connecting rod.
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This morning, after searching around a great deal, I found the engine which uses this type of governor. It is a Hercules engine from the early 1900's. Attached is a rather crummy video of the engine, and you don't see the actual governor until very near the end of the video at 6:11.
 
There are several that use similar, these from a Ruston Hornsby I started making one of these a few years ago but on the back burner at the moment. These like the one in your video link are geared from the larger cam gear so they run faster which should be easier to get working than scaling down a slower rotating one on a cam gear.
 

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And just because I can---This is the Kerzel engine and my new engine together. Admittedly, the fact that my new engine is air cooled and the Kerzel is water cooled, makes quite a dramatic size difference in the cylinder diameters. Also, the Kerzel is 3/4" bore, while my new engine is 1" diameter bore. The Kerzel has 3 1/2" diameter flywheels, my new engine has 4 1/2" diameter flywheels.
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