The
Six-Stroke Engine
Posted by Alan Bellows on March 18th, 2006 at 10:01 pm
Bruce Crower with his six-stroke prototypeUnder the hood of almost
all modern automobiles there sits a four-stroke internal combustion
engine (ICE). Though the efficiency of the design has been improved
upon significantly in the intervening years, the basic concept is
the same today as that used by the first practical four-stroke
engine built in the 1870s. During every cycle in a typical car
engine, each piston moves up and down twice in the chamber,
resulting in four total strokes… one of which is the power stroke
that provides the torque to move the vehicle. But the automotive
industry may soon be revolutionized by a new six-stroke design
which adds a second power stroke, resulting in a much more
efficient and less polluting alternative.
In a traditional ICE cycle, 1) the fuel/air valves open as the
piston moves down, which draws air and fuel into the chamber; 2)
the valves close as the piston moves back up, putting the air/fuel
mixture under pressure; 3) the mixture is then ignited, causing a
small explosion which forces the piston back down, which turns the
crank and provides the torque; and finally 4) the exhaust valves
open as the piston moves back up once again, pushing the byproducts
of the fuel explosion out of the chamber. This leaves the piston
back in its starting position, ready for another cycle. This
process is repeated thousands of times per minute.
The clever new six-stroke design was developed by 75-year-old
mechanic and tinkerer Bruce Crower, a veteran of the racing
industry and a the owner of a company which produces
high-performance cams and other engine parts. He had long been
trying to devise a way to harness the waste heat energy of
combustion engines, and one day in 2004 he awoke with an idea which
he immediately set to work designing and machining. He modified a
single-cylinder engine on his workbench to use the new design, and
after fabricating the parts and assembling the powerplant, he
poured in some gas and yanked the starter rope. His prototype
worked.
His addition to the ICE design is simple in principle, yet a stroke
of genius. After the exhaust cycles out of the chamber, rather than
squirting more fuel and air into the chamber, his design injects
ordinary water. Inside the extremely hot chamber, the water
immediately turns to steam– expanding to 1600 times its volume–
which forces the piston down for a second power stroke. Another
exhaust cycle pushes the steam out of the chamber, and then the
six-stroke cycle begins again.
Besides providing power, this water injection cycle cools the
engine from within, making an engine's heavy radiator, coolant, and
fans obsolete. Despite its lack of a conventional liquid cooling
system, his bench engine is only warm to the touch while it is
running.
From the Autoweek article:Crower invites us to imagine a car or
truck (he speaks of a Bonneville streamliner, too) free of a
radiator and its associated air ducting, fan, plumbing, coolant
weight, etc.
“Especially an 18-wheeler, they’ve got that massive radiator that
weighs 800, 1000 pounds. Not necessary,” he asserts. “In those big
trucks, they look at payload as their bread and butter. If you get
1000 lb. or more off the truck…”
Offsetting that, of course, would be the need to carry large
quantities of water, and water is heavier than gasoline or diesel
oil. Preliminary estimates suggest a Crower cycle engine will use
roughly as many gallons of water as fuel.
And Crower feels the water should be distilled, to prevent deposits
inside the system, so a supply infrastructure will have to be
created. (He uses rainwater in his testing.) Keeping the water from
freezing will be another challenge.
Bruce Crower holds a patent on the new design– which he is still
developing and tweaking– but he estimates that eventually his
six-stroke engine could improve a typical engine’s fuel consumption
by as much as forty percent.
-- 03:28, 19 April 2006 (UTC)