Wednesday, July 16, 2008


made this one up in a hurry in reply to a goth-chick-on-orkut that 'this is what i think is sexy!'

Friday, July 11, 2008

An engine's exhaust port can be thought of as a sound generator. (I knew it!)

http://www.motorcycle.com/how-to/how-twostroke-expansion-chambers-work-and-why-you-should-care-3423.html

How Two-Stroke Expansion Chambers Work, and Why You Should Care.
By Eric Murray , Apr. 23, 1996

In reality, expansion chambers are built to harness sound waves (created in the combustion process) to first suck the cylinder clean of spent gasses--and in the process, drawing fresh air/gas mixture (known as 'charge') into the chamber itself--and then stuff all the charge back into the cylinder, filling it to greater pressures than could be achieved by simply venting the exhaust port into the open atmosphere. This phenomenon was first discovered in the 1950s by Walter Kaaden, who was working at the East German company MZ. Kaaden understood that there was power in the sound waves coming from the exhaust system, and opened up a whole new field in two-stroke theory and tuning.
An engine's exhaust port can be thought of as a sound generator..."