This might have been what he was talking about. Still has a cam but no valve springs.scotta wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:31 pmI’m sure I had a discussion with my BIL about race/super bikes using cam less valves. Not 100% certain though.NotoriousREV wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:47 pmNot that I’m aware of. Unless you’re thinking of 2 strokes?
Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Lotus AVT. This article is from 2014 but I think the system was active (see what I did there?) around 2011.
I wonder if the ‘egg version is a development of this, or home grown using the same concept. Mr Egg does stress that his is patented....
I wonder if the ‘egg version is a development of this, or home grown using the same concept. Mr Egg does stress that his is patented....
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
You may have had the conversation, but they don’t exist.scotta wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:31 pmI’m sure I had a discussion with my BIL about race/super bikes using cam less valves. Not 100% certain though.NotoriousREV wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:47 pmNot that I’m aware of. Unless you’re thinking of 2 strokes?
Middle-aged Dirtbag
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Ducatis don’t use springs, either. They have “desmodromic” valves which use followers to actively close the valves and seat them. They still use cams, though. It’s supposed to reduce power loss as you don’t expend power pushing against the spring.scotta wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:35 pmThis might have been what he was talking about. Still has a cam but no valve springs.scotta wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:31 pmI’m sure I had a discussion with my BIL about race/super bikes using cam less valves. Not 100% certain though.NotoriousREV wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:47 pm
Not that I’m aware of. Unless you’re thinking of 2 strokes?
Middle-aged Dirtbag
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Rotary valves perhaps?NotoriousREV wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 4:15 pmDucatis don’t use springs, either. They have “desmodromic” valves which use followers to actively close the valves and seat them. They still use cams, though. It’s supposed to reduce power loss as you don’t expend power pushing against the spring.
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
I don’t believe there’s any ever been used in any production or actual series race bike.RobYob wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 4:59 pmRotary valves perhaps?NotoriousREV wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 4:15 pmDucatis don’t use springs, either. They have “desmodromic” valves which use followers to actively close the valves and seat them. They still use cams, though. It’s supposed to reduce power loss as you don’t expend power pushing against the spring.
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
The problem with any entirely camless engine based on existing cylinder head layout is that whatever method you use, pneumatic, hydraulic or electrical has to be 100% reliable over millions of activations. One slight blip and a valve smacks a piston and its game over, hard to ensure a failsafe system with no mechanical link between the top and bottom of the engine.
Look at how massive the setup for the lotus engine was, they proved the technology worked but how on earth are you going to shrink something like than down to package it whilst keeping costs reasonable and ensuring reliability over many tens of thousands of miles?
The fiat multiair system is quite neat, barely any bigger than a normal cylinder head setup, but detaches the motion of the intake valves from the camshaft with what's effectively an on the fly adjustable hydraulic link.
Because it still has conventional valves and springs, if it fails and the unit doesn't maintain oil pressure then the link between the car and valve is broken, the valve doesn't open and the engine doesn't run. If it fails the other way and jams pressurised the valve just follows the profile of the cam, there is no way it can leave a valve dangling in the cylinder ready for the piston to say hello.
Look at how massive the setup for the lotus engine was, they proved the technology worked but how on earth are you going to shrink something like than down to package it whilst keeping costs reasonable and ensuring reliability over many tens of thousands of miles?
The fiat multiair system is quite neat, barely any bigger than a normal cylinder head setup, but detaches the motion of the intake valves from the camshaft with what's effectively an on the fly adjustable hydraulic link.
Because it still has conventional valves and springs, if it fails and the unit doesn't maintain oil pressure then the link between the car and valve is broken, the valve doesn't open and the engine doesn't run. If it fails the other way and jams pressurised the valve just follows the profile of the cam, there is no way it can leave a valve dangling in the cylinder ready for the piston to say hello.
Cheers, Harry
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Probably why it’s ideal for something like this car. The average one won’t do more than 100 miles a year and a service starts from £30,000 so they can check it all over yearly
How about not having a sig at all?
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Just noticed this you cheeky young scamp! As for how things were back then, I can't say because I was always kept in the dark as a result of my chimney cleaning apprenticeship.
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Middle-aged Dirtbag
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Konigsegg/Freevalve have been running it in a Saab 9-5 since 2009..integrale_evo wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:30 pm The problem with any entirely camless engine based on existing cylinder head layout is that whatever method you use, pneumatic, hydraulic or electrical has to be 100% reliable over millions of activations. One slight blip and a valve smacks a piston and its game over, hard to ensure a failsafe system with no mechanical link between the top and bottom of the engine.
Look at how massive the setup for the lotus engine was, they proved the technology worked but how on earth are you going to shrink something like than down to package it whilst keeping costs reasonable and ensuring reliability over many tens of thousands of miles?
The fiat multiair system is quite neat, barely any bigger than a normal cylinder head setup, but detaches the motion of the intake valves from the camshaft with what's effectively an on the fly adjustable hydraulic link.
Because it still has conventional valves and springs, if it fails and the unit doesn't maintain oil pressure then the link between the car and valve is broken, the valve doesn't open and the engine doesn't run. If it fails the other way and jams pressurised the valve just follows the profile of the cam, there is no way it can leave a valve dangling in the cylinder ready for the piston to say hello.
https://drivetribe.com/p/freevalve-tech ... T6vJ4xGh6Q
The Evo forum really is a shadow of its former self. I remember when the internet was for the elite and now they seem to let any spastic on
IaFG Down Under Division
IaFG Down Under Division
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
I have a collection of bent Multiair valves alongside a broken Multiair unit.integrale_evo wrote: ↑Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:30 pm The problem with any entirely camless engine based on existing cylinder head layout is that whatever method you use, pneumatic, hydraulic or electrical has to be 100% reliable over millions of activations. One slight blip and a valve smacks a piston and its game over, hard to ensure a failsafe system with no mechanical link between the top and bottom of the engine.
Look at how massive the setup for the lotus engine was, they proved the technology worked but how on earth are you going to shrink something like than down to package it whilst keeping costs reasonable and ensuring reliability over many tens of thousands of miles?
The fiat multiair system is quite neat, barely any bigger than a normal cylinder head setup, but detaches the motion of the intake valves from the camshaft with what's effectively an on the fly adjustable hydraulic link.
Because it still has conventional valves and springs, if it fails and the unit doesn't maintain oil pressure then the link between the car and valve is broken, the valve doesn't open and the engine doesn't run. If it fails the other way and jams pressurised the valve just follows the profile of the cam, there is no way it can leave a valve dangling in the cylinder ready for the piston to say hello.
Middle-aged Dirtbag
- integrale_evo
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Ok, 'should' be failsafe
Must admit, I've heard of plenty of unit failures but never of bent valves.
Must admit, I've heard of plenty of unit failures but never of bent valves.
Cheers, Harry
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Amazing packaging but the engines cleverness does nothing for me wanting one. Ooh half a GT2, hmm, not exactly a selling point when it’s a million pound car.
It does look absolutely fantastic though.
Dave!
It does look absolutely fantastic though.
Dave!
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
It's not quite how it reads to me, they did 6000 miles with it in an engine between 2009 and 2011, so if it was as perfect as they thought why has it taken another 9 years to be put into a simpler ( 3 cylinder) very expensive, very limited production vehicle?unzippy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 4:27 am
Konigsegg/Freevalve have been running it in a Saab 9-5 since 2009..
https://drivetribe.com/p/freevalve-tech ... T6vJ4xGh6Q
Don't get me wrong, it would be wonderful if all production cars had it, the benefits would be huge, and I hope they succeed in it, but if it was that easy it would have been done by now and people wouldn't keep thinking up other ways to do part of the same job.
Cheers, Harry
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
6000 miles of testing is absolutely bugger all.
We would do more testing than that on a thermostat, it’s less than 250 hours of actual test time so about 11 days on a test bed set up.
Dave!
We would do more testing than that on a thermostat, it’s less than 250 hours of actual test time so about 11 days on a test bed set up.
Dave!
Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
Dunno, I just remember being very impressed a long time ago -integrale_evo wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 9:38 amIt's not quite how it reads to me, they did 6000 miles with it in an engine between 2009 and 2011, so if it was as perfect as they thought why has it taken another 9 years to be put into a simpler ( 3 cylinder) very expensive, very limited production vehicle?unzippy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 4:27 am
Konigsegg/Freevalve have been running it in a Saab 9-5 since 2009..
https://drivetribe.com/p/freevalve-tech ... T6vJ4xGh6Q
Don't get me wrong, it would be wonderful if all production cars had it, the benefits would be huge, and I hope they succeed in it, but if it was that easy it would have been done by now and people wouldn't keep thinking up other ways to do part of the same job.
Hyundai are at it too:
https://www.roadandtrack.com/new-cars/c ... explained/
The Evo forum really is a shadow of its former self. I remember when the internet was for the elite and now they seem to let any spastic on
IaFG Down Under Division
IaFG Down Under Division
- integrale_evo
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Re: Cone-eggsegg Gamora
We had a little discussion about it in the YouTube thread, the Hyundai system is nearly identical in the way the cam speed is altered to the Rover VVC system from the mid 90s, just using an electronic actuator and worm gear instead of a solenoid and oil pressure to rotate an eccentric journal.unzippy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 10:35 pm
Dunno, I just remember being very impressed a long time ago -
Hyundai are at it too:
https://www.roadandtrack.com/new-cars/c ... explained/
Cheers, Harry