A point of curiosity? How long would the engine last merely sitting and running? not stop /start stuff but running. Say as a stress test of the heating/cooling of the engine and components.
A stock L-head, air cooled with the vent not over the fins: ~30 minutes of dyno testing. At which point the oil starts to steam out of the crank case and the head temperature reaches 425F +.... not good for an aluminum engine.
A stock L-head with no oil: ~30 minutes before the cylinder lining and crankshaft surfaces are completely scored and ruined. Then the rings will break....
Last year's OHV rocker 12.3:1 C.R. engine: about 1 minute at full throttle (~3.3 hp) and it was up around 270F from room temp.
This year's rotary valve: ? I'm guessing maybe 30-60 seconds. The teflon in the exhaust bearing will melt first when it gets up above 500F. The graphite port seal should hold up well. The piston will probably melt first due to the very high combustion temperatures and lack of cooling.... of which may be compromised if we decided to eliminate the oil in the crank case. The new engine will also probably have all of its fins cut off and wrapped with insulation to keep it warmer ( as if a 150F engine compartment with no airflow wasn't enough...). I think we should study the effects of a cold air intake by putting our 1500W heat gun up to the carb.....
If you had a stock engine with it just sitting, running say at 1 hp, then it would probably run forever until the oil turned into sludge or the spark plug gets fouled or dirt gets into the carburetor jets. Or in our case last year, the points wear out b/c we were running the ignition on 16v and 150W for a single spark plug.
WOW! and here I am enjoying the hypermilage tricks I use to get above the 36/mpg in my 2010 Chevy
.
Today, I tried my best going to work and improved my mileage by 20% over the previous day with 20.7 mpg in my Jeep.
We ran into yet another problem with thermoforming the windshield.... this time, we put the plastic sheets in a dryer to get the moisture out over the weekend and when we opened it up today to use it, the plastic was all melted together in a big mess. So, attempt #3 with mold attempt #4 will be tried this Thursday. On the plus side, the rotary valve head should be done, so I hope to personally assemble it tomorrow afternoon.
Here is the rotary valve


And the unfinished assembly as of late last week:
