OK. Still seems contradictory to me.
If the cylinder is hot enough not to absorb heat on the expansion stroke, how is it then suddenly cold enough to absorb heat on the "contraction"? And at that, after the gas has expanded and cooled to some degree, logically, I think.
Anyway, the slow mo video, I think, tells the tale. It isn't cold enough, the pressure relief valve, when free to do so stays open. In other models the intake valve opens early to let out the pressure during the supposed "contraction".
Admittedly, hot air molecules driving the piston, or even a jet stream of hot air, with no "pressure" and the valve wide open is pretty hard to imagine or accept, so I think some testing is needed to confirm this, but the conventional theory or assumption that heat is being absorbed by the cylinder so quickly makes no sense to me. It makes even less sense if the cylinder has to be heated up before it can cool down the gas.
I think the gas is cooled by the very meger adiabatic expansion, against all odds, and a miniscule amounts of adiabatic contraction just after BDC (expansion) before the pressure begins to build.
Thanks, I'll try to locate that and take a look.As for the standing wave theory, reference the 2 stroke tuners handbook