we were on page umpteen of a thread about some vaporware known as the husqvarna 590. i mentioned that i think i understand husqvarna/remax strato toechnology fairly well but whenever i sit down and meditate on a 575 piston, i just need to flip the cap on a cold ipa. chris-pa was kind enuff to send me a document from husqvarna that goes into it in depth:
and included this attachment: MikaelMasterThesis.pdf
it's full of some fascinating graphs and CAD illustrations and a lot of squiggly calculus stuff and a few nuggets of very interesting text.
here are some fotos of a 575 piston and cylinder:
the main feature here is the external transfer duct running from below the exhaust port to the upper cylinder. i think it's bent to make it longer. it's only about 1/2 inch in diameter. theses saws don't need much to drink.
this is the carb flange. the square hole in the middle is for fuel intake, sucked in when the piston rises. the two round ports are for fresh air, supplied by a second throttle valve linked to the carb. at a certain part of each cycle, when there is a vacuum in the case, fresh air is sucked backwards into the tops transfers.
the cavity at the bottom allows a conduit for the fresh air to flow backwards into the top of the transfers when the piston is in the correct position. The slot at the top is what has tormented me for years. i couldn't figure out what it did.
here's another view. you can see a hole is bored all the way thru the thing. that's a 5mm allen. wtf? i was amazed to find out that "...the function of the piston pockets in Figure 2.7 are to reduce the weight of the piston.
see page 18 of:
MikaelMasterThesis.pdf
If you want to wade through the terminology and the language translation issues, the info you're looking for is in the attached Master's Thesis doc. It's really about the use of computer modeling to show how the fuel/air flows through an engine, but it happens to be based on the 570/575/576 series of engine. Towards the end (Section 3) there is a series of graphics showing air and fuel location in the ports by crank angle. The "passive scalar" refers to the air with fuel in it, or maybe the boundary between fuel and plain air.
and included this attachment: MikaelMasterThesis.pdf
it's full of some fascinating graphs and CAD illustrations and a lot of squiggly calculus stuff and a few nuggets of very interesting text.
here are some fotos of a 575 piston and cylinder:
the main feature here is the external transfer duct running from below the exhaust port to the upper cylinder. i think it's bent to make it longer. it's only about 1/2 inch in diameter. theses saws don't need much to drink.
this is the carb flange. the square hole in the middle is for fuel intake, sucked in when the piston rises. the two round ports are for fresh air, supplied by a second throttle valve linked to the carb. at a certain part of each cycle, when there is a vacuum in the case, fresh air is sucked backwards into the tops transfers.
the cavity at the bottom allows a conduit for the fresh air to flow backwards into the top of the transfers when the piston is in the correct position. The slot at the top is what has tormented me for years. i couldn't figure out what it did.
here's another view. you can see a hole is bored all the way thru the thing. that's a 5mm allen. wtf? i was amazed to find out that "...the function of the piston pockets in Figure 2.7 are to reduce the weight of the piston.
see page 18 of:
MikaelMasterThesis.pdf