Does anyone know what the ave temperature is for the blaster ? cylinder temp or max temp ?
I did not know, if anyone has done some real engine temp testing or not.
Compression, Man I tell ya, I can't find the compression recommendation in my manual, what page, is it on ? cuz I must be ray charles, cant find it.
Now I see 6:6:1 ratio.
Is there anyone, out there that boosted there compression ratio, with tighter specs for the cylinder / piston wall clearance and piston ring gap ??
I was looking at maybe buying a temp gauge for aorund $40, but would not really know, what the average temp is or max temp before it locked. was hoping for some type of baseline.
Sporty
I've been averaging 300 to 340 degrees in the 98 to 105 degree ambient tempuratures here in Nevada.
I've been testing engine tempuratures in this thread here >>>
http://www.blasterforum.com/engine-13/joeak47s-thread-cast-piston-vs-wiseco-forged-piston-49255/
Some folks think that might be high,but its not. I believe that humidity also has a factor in running tempuratures too.
I looked into other "Air Cooled" engine temperatures,both non-forced air and forced air cooled engines. Both two stroke and four stroke.
The blaster temperatures you see in the thread above ar way low compared to the temperatures that the gokart guys run,and....the gokart guys run them for long periods of time under "probably" heavier loads than us blaster guys do.
The gokart guys running the two stroke Yamaha KT-100 engines are running temperatures "as high as" 500+ degrees!!!

However,...they have no issues unless the engines are getting detonation,and the engines put out the power at the higher temperatures!
This is a Yamaha KT-100 engine...
What I found very interesting is the gokart guys that run in the "clone class",which is the class that runs the,for the most part,a "chinese copy" of the honda gx200 lawn mower engine. These forced air cooled (fan cooled) engines are four strokes with valves and springs to worry about keeping cool. These clone engine guys run right about 400 degrees!
Here's a link to a very short read on the clone tempuratures...
4 Cycle Karting Forums - Clone Racing Temp
This one is from harbor freight...they look like this...
if you have this manual here...its on page 87 top left corner 140 -160 psi ...
DON'T FOR GET THIS... you have to compensate for altitude when doing a compression test! Add 3.4% for every 1000 ft increase in altitude above sea level.
Your not going to get a big increase in power with an increase in compression on a two stroke. It helps a bit,but makes a bigger difference on a four stroke engine.
Don't get too tight on your piston to cylinder clearance,or you'll run into problems. Cast pistons run tighter tolerances than forged pistons,so be careful,especially with a forged piston. A forged piston needs more room to expand as it warms up.
Closing up the ring gap won't do much for compression,and can get you in trouble if its too tight when things get hot. They need room to expand too.
Also don't get stuck on the 6.6 to 1 compression ratio as being low. Thats just the static compression ratio.
Hope this helps you out. Joe