i was looking at some amsoil 2 cycle pre mix oils and it recommends 50:1 ratio isnt that more rich than the 32:1
Is that the same as Ken runs in his super clean motor?
i run mamima super m also, but not because ken told me to lololol I:I I:I
yes thats the same oil ken runs,
and i didnt even know this place, or ken oconnor even existed back when i ran super m in my '96, from day 1 till and sold it 8 years later with the stock piston in it, and still good compression and firing in 1-2 kicks everytime
my recent experimentation with amsoil and klotz was directly related to info on here, but back to where i started, and will finish, with super m
i was looking at some amsoil 2 cycle pre mix oils and it recommends 50:1 ratio isnt that more rich than the 32:1
when talking about pre mix, 50:1 is leaner than 32:1 in terms of premix. but when you run a leaner premix than before, your a/f ratio because richer.
and for air cooled, you running 32:1 because of the cooling properties that oil has.
liquid cooled motors can run 40:1 and 50:1 because they dont need the oil to keep the motor cool.
Interesting argument Shee, but lean/rich refers to the fuel, not the oil. And having a good air/fuel ratio (read jetting) is what is going to keep an engine cool. Whether you want to talk about combustion temp (mixture) or the effect of latent heat of evaporation, extra fuel is what keeps an engine cool.
Oil lubricates---that's pretty much it. Certainly it helps a "little", but not even in the same ballpark as the effect of fuel. Now circulate some oil in a sump or better yet through a cooler and you have a better argument.
shee, you are wrong.
Reduced friction is a by-product of keeping things from locking up.
The phase change of the fuel is the primary cooling mechanism not the oil. As a matter of fact, the oil drops out of suspension as soon as it hits the crank case...
Oil is sprayed onto the bottom of certain pistons to be able to access the wrist pin bearing on engines without intake windows cut into the piston.
You are right about "when you run a leaner premix than before, your a/f ratio because (sp?) richer" I will agree with that part of your statement. You're playing word games with the rest of it.
The reason air cooled engines need more oil than liquid cooled engines has nothing to do with needing oil to keep the engine cool. Actually, the engine being cooler allows a liquid cooled engine to run less oil. There are five things that HAVE to have oil in a 2 stroke engine; the main bearings, the crank seals, the wrist pin (or little end bearing), the crank bearing (or big end bearing), and the piston to cylinder wall surfaces. Liquid cooled engines pass heat away from the piston crown more efficiently than air cooled engine requiring less oil for the piston and cylinder wall surfaces.
The moral of the story is, find a premix ratio that works for you. 32:1 for most oils, 50:1 for some others and STICK WITH IT. Then adjust your carburetor jetting to get the proper AFR. You should never adjust your oil mixing ratio to adjust your engine tune.