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  2. X-engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X-engine

    This is geometrically an inverted Wankel engine that operates on the high-efficiency hybrid cycle. [1] [2] In the Wankel, the only successful pistonless rotary engine to date, a figure-eight-like epitrochoid housing surrounds a curved sided triangular rotor. The rotor revolves around a fixed gear in a hula-hoop motion. The output shaft revolves ...

  3. Wankel engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wankel_engine

    The Wankel engine is a type of rotary piston engine and exists in two primary forms, the Drehkolbenmotor (DKM, "rotary piston engine"), designed by Felix Wankel (see Figure 2.) and the Kreiskolbenmotor (KKM, "circuitous piston engine"), designed by Hanns-Dieter Paschke [2] (see Figure 3.), of which only the latter has left the prototype stage ...

  4. Rotary engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotary_engine

    A rotary engine is essentially a standard Otto cycle engine, with cylinders arranged radially around a central crankshaft just like a conventional radial engine, but instead of having a fixed cylinder block with rotating crankshaft, the crankshaft remains stationary and the entire cylinder block rotates around it.

  5. Wankel Diesel engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wankel_Diesel_engine

    The main cause of Wankel Diesel engine infeasibility is the shape of the combustion chamber, located in the rotary piston. It is elongated and convex, thus not allowing a high enough compression ratio (without too much heat loss), [ 7 ] even in combination with a (solely crankshaft or exhaust gas driven) supercharger.

  6. Engine configuration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engine_configuration

    Similar to U engines, H engines consist of two separate flat engines joined by gears or chains. H engines have been produced with between 4 and 24 cylinders. An opposed-piston engine is similar to a flat engine in that pairs of pistons are co-axial but rather than sharing a crankshaft, instead share a single combustion chamber per pair of ...

  7. Fluidyne engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluidyne_engine

    A Fluidyne engine is an alpha or gamma type Stirling engine with one or more liquid pistons. It contains a working gas (often air), and either two liquid pistons or one liquid piston and a displacer. [1] The engine was invented in 1969. [2] The engine was patented in 1973 by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority. [3] [2]

  8. RKM engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RKM_engine

    A simple RKM rotary engine. The Rotary Piston Machine (German: Rotationskolbenmaschine (RKM)) is a proposed (still in development) form of machine. It can be used either to transform pressure into rotational motion (an engine), or the converse - rotational motion into pressure . It is still in development, but has possible applications in ...

  9. Rotax 532 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotax_532

    The 532 features liquid-cooled cylinder heads and cylinders with a rotary valve inlet. Cooling is via one or two externally mounted radiators. Lubrication is by use of pre-mixed fuel and oil at 50:1. The 532 has a single Bosch flywheel magneto ignition system. It can be equipped with either one or two piston-type carburetors. It uses a manifold ...