Looking at 1 thing in isolation is not quite right, because at any 1 time in a 2T engine there are 2 things happening. Flow needs a a pressure differential as soon as that difference is equalised flow stops(yes that flow wil have inertia and continue) but effectively it is zero. From the graphs you can see case/tx pressure is equalised not long after BDC only the pipe is pulling on the cylinder. Soon after BDC case pressure starts to drop and the disc starts to open we haven't even got the full duration of the tx from a theoretical maximum. Even at a modest 6000 rpm (100Hz) and 120 deg tx duration 0.0033sec is the
maximum time the transfers are open - reverse flow, time to start flow + the inertia there isn't much time to jam 250cc from the cases through ducts. Even if 250cc or more goes through the cases while that is happening the cases are being filled. Two strokes don't have clear defined phases unlike a 4T (suck, squeeze, bang ,wheeze)
everything is intertwined and connected. A single unit or block of intake charge does not travel through carb,cases, transfers combustion then out the pipe. It takes 3-5 cycles to go from cases to cylinder.
Before and after peak power the pipe influence isn't as strong, look at a 2 stroke road bike black soot in the transfers everywhere, from being ridden at not an optimum rpm.
Yes a spring ringing can even fool a det counter, spent a full day chasing that one
, combustion can never happen fast enough, the faster the burn the more power you will make from a) not having to run as much advance b) peak cylinder pressure at or about 15deg ATDC.
Yes deto can occur in the situation Trevor says(I've seen his name on the ESE tuner thread) less likely to happen when the throttle is open. Which bring a neat circle back to Johns origninal problem, which never happened with the throttle open, reeds didn't open cases didn't fill -faster and greater pressure drop was enough to pull on the seal.
Never heard of that one before