Fool wrote: ↑Sat Apr 27, 2024 5:34 am
You are mixing Stroller and my posts.
No, Stroller & I apparently cross posted. I never even saw his post at all before posting.
Yes the gas leaks by the piston in both directions.
Nonsense. Now I can comment on Strollers post. Maybe if your piston and cylinder is so badly worn it can no longer hold air, or a model with mismatched parts. but at best that would result in your engine running poorly, not improve it or somehow be a factor in allowing it to run.
It maintains an average pressure balance of approximately the atmosphere. The gas in the hot space is less dense because it is hotter and at the same pressure. When the piston returns "more forcefully" and slams the head, the pressure peaks, making more leak by. Overall more gas leaks out, than into, the hot zone. Average density stays about the same because the average pressure is still atmospheric. The volume inside gets smaller, so the piston gets closer and closer. It is approximately a one for one volume change with the other side of the piston for zero total cylinder gas volume change. The gas after moving out of the hot zone cools, if needed, to the atmosphere temperature. So the balloon doesn't expand.
LOL,
So much silliness not worth my time and energy to try and find something in all that that might make any sense at all that might be worth commenting on.
There is no significant "leaky piston".
There is no "blow by"
Your whole analysis is based on something springing from your imagination.
Why, have you got different data?
Non sequitur. No idea what data you're talking about "different" or not.
Edit: reading VincentG's posts just now, if that's what you mean,
He appears to be basing observations on an engine where the crank is removed and he moves the displacer by hand.
Most Stirling engines use dry lubricant and have to account for thermal expansion, so the piston is designed to be slightly loose until it heats up and expands due to friction while running to make a perfect seal.
Operating by hand, probably his engine shows some leakage. How he's testing for that, I have no idea. I have no idea what engine, the condition of the engine, what lubricant, nothing. Don't care. It's insignificant.
All engines, including IC engines need to allow for thermal expansion. The allowance goes away soon after the engine starts running.
Most engines have rings to maintain a continuous seal while allowing some room for piston expansion and contraction
Quite often I build engines, check carefully for leaks, make custom pistons I fit or hone down myself and use a non flammable liquid lubricant when possible.
Aside from that many Stirling engines have diaphragm power pistons, or rolling sock pistons or leak proof magnetic actuators or otherwise completely eliminate any possibility of leakage. They run better for it. You imply a Stirling engine requires a leaky piston to operate.
That's absolutely ridiculous.