Earlier in the thread they had a minor tiff about who has the biggest spanner, if you know what i mean. And in those two posts above, they're effectively getting them out, laying them on the table, and comparing sizes. Unfortunately for us regular human beings who haven't the faintest idea what either of them said, we'll never know who won.
Anyway, are we any closer to finding out which is the most beautiful engine ?
The most beautiful engine i've ever saw was a rolls royce engine out of a WWII fighter plane (I think it was a fighter) It was in a shop that fixes blown head gaskets and stuff, was other engines like sierra cosworths and stuff, all looked brand new.
I didn't bother to take any pictures, but I would gladly go back just to get some!
Ever heard one? They make baby jesus jizz his pants. V12 of the biggest kind, was in Spitfires and was in the Hurricane MkC i think too, it was also in bombers but I don't remember which ones of the top of my head.
Jumo 2-10 was a good motor too, and being fuel injected, meant the Axis pilots could dive 109's and Stuka without dragging the engine, and they could also fly inverted.
I'm certain they're in the Lancaster bomber as well. If you ever get the chance to see the Battle of Britain Memorial Flight anywhere you can hear the lovely wonders of at least 6 Merlin engines tearing up the sky together. Best engine ever?
Sorry, I didn't see this, even though it was right after my reply - it was tucked away at the bottom of page 4.
But yes, I am claiming any bending will be in that plane. In 'your' plane there can't be much bending as the rod is free to rotate.
In my direction, whilst bending is slightly constrained, buckling is still a distinct possiblity.
If you don't agree, then why do most high performance forged/machined rods have the style I'm voting for? Why would an F1 car pointlessly reinforce in the direction least likely to be affected by bending/buckling? FEA techniques aren't usually employed to add pointless material to load bearing structures.