... crankcase pressure peaks AFTER the transfers open how can the crankcase pressurise with the transfers open?
This is probably not of any value to Lozza, but others might be interested in this stuff.
When the transfer ports open, as the piston descends, the initial opening is Very Small.
The transfers are still a restriction at this point, they are not fully open until BDC.
The fresh charge in the transfer ports is stationary. It has Mass that needs to be accelerated.
It takes time to get it moving across the cylinder toward the exhaust port.
Meanwhile....the piston is still descending, reducing the volume in the crankcase.
Volume decrease = pressure increase.
Other stuff is happening, the Intake port has closed.
Air & fuel previously drawn into the Crankcase will warm up, from say 20C. to maybe 100C or even more.
This is through contact with cases, crank, rod, lower part of cylinder and the piston, especially the underside of the crown.
As the pressure increases the heat transfer increases even further ( like pushing the steak onto the BBQ plate).
Increase of Temperature X5 = effective pressure increase X5.
That would be significant enough if we were inducting just air, but unless we are running on LPG,
we have a significant proportion of raw fuel particles in the charge. The change in volume of petrol,
as it vapourises in the hot case, is X160. More opportunity for pressure increases in the crank-case.
As the transfers open wider (increasing the volumetric flow), temperature increase stabilises and the rate of volume change falls, as the piston approaches BDC, then the pressures in the transfers and the crankcase equalise. (visible in the graph).
There are a lot of thing going on in a 2-Stroke engine Temperatures, Pressures, Mass flows, and we haven't even looked at fixed amplitude sound waves...yet.
Cheers, Daryl.