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  2. Main bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_bearing

    A main bearing is a bearing in a piston engine which holds the crankshaft in place and allows it to rotate within the engine block. The number of main bearings per engine varies between engines, often in accordance with the forces produced by the operation of the engine. Main bearings are usually plain bearings or journal bearings, held in ...

  3. Cross-bolted bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-bolted_bearing

    A cross-bolted bearing is a bearing, usually a crankshaft main bearing of a piston engine, reinforced with additional transverse bolts.Most bearing caps are retained by two bolts, one on each side of the bearing journal, and parallel to the cylinder axis (or, on vee engines, parallel to an axis bisecting the vee angle).

  4. Tunnel crankcase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunnel_crankcase

    A tunnel crankcase, tunnel crankshaft or disc-webbed crankshaft [1] is a design feature of a piston engine where the main bearings that support the crankshaft within the crankcase form the largest diameter of any part of the crankshaft and are larger than the crank webs. This requires a crankcase with a large tunnel instead of cross web ...

  5. Crankshaft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankshaft

    The number of main bearings is determined based on the overall load factor and the maximum engine speed. Crankshafts in diesel engines often use a main bearing between every cylinder and at both ends of the crankshaft, due to the high forces of combustion present.

  6. Straight-eight engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Straight-eight_engine

    Without such damping, fatigue cracking near the rear main bearing journal may occur, leading to engine failure. Although an inline six -cylinder engine can also be timed for inherent primary and secondary balance, a straight-eight develops more power strokes per revolution and, as a result, will run more smoothly under load than an inline six.

  7. Crankcase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankcase

    The crankcase often forms the upper half of the main bearing journals (with the bearing caps forming the other half), although in some engines the crankcase completely surrounds the main bearing journals. An open-crank engine has no crankcase. This design was used in early engines and remains in use in some large marine diesel engines.

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