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Cycle World Technical Editor Kevin Cameron explains the cycle of intake, compression, power, and exhaust, and why pre-ignition and detonation are “worth avoiding.”
Until the electric-vehicle revolution has advanced quite a bit from where it is at the moment, motorcycles remain largely powered by combustion engines. And that means pistons going up and down in cylinders connected to rotating crankshafts by connecting rods.
In the case of a four-stroke engine, it takes two revolutions of the crankshaft to complete the cycle of intake, compression, power, and exhaust. But in two-stroke engines, those same processes all happen within one crankshaft revolution.
Central to both conditions is a piston moving up and down in a cylinder. When the piston rises in the cylinder to compress the mixture of fuel and air above it, a spark plug screwed into the head ignites that mixture. The result is not an explosion. It is simply deflagration.
Combustion begins in the gap of the spark plug. A little flame kernel is then torn to pieces by vigorous air motion in the mixture and that causes a rapid spread of flame. When the flame spreads right out to the edge, the fuel and air are consumed.
Energy is transformed into heat, which causes the pressure of the gas in the combustion chamber to rise. That chunk of energy drives the piston downward on the power stroke. Sometimes that lovely, normal, gradual combustion process goes wrong.
Pre-ignition is exactly what it sounds like: ignition of the fuel-air mixture before the spark. Detonation, which occurs after normal ignition but near the end of combustion, is another type of failure. Both of these are worth avoiding.
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