vorticism wrote: ↑06 Feb 2026, 02:52
IVC early would bring you back to Otto or, if really early, relative to Miller-type extended IVO, to some other Miller-like cycle (maybe there's a term for the that)
In-cylinder expansion cooling I doubt would offer much since the charge will be recompressed--where would the heat go? Or is the suggestion that, if fueled during IVO, the fuel vaporizes more in such a mode to provide phase change cooling
Regardless of valve timing, if greater expansion ratios are ever better for these Miller cycle engines, you are still right back at reducing the CC volume at TDC via whatever means i.e. the ongoing discussion across several months
There's some interesting adpect within this topic (I'd put on forum before, from Pat Symonds presentation) which was kicked back as being untenable
The point about early closing of inlet valve, before BDC, interests as it doesn't seem initially to be logical if looking at purely outright power ONLY.
If the intake charge at say 3 x atmosphere from turbine fills competently the cylinder before reaching absolute BDC, then closing it could avoid the "dead" relatively speaking, spot around BDC without much compromise. This ultimately to avoid port flow reversal against turbine derived pressure and losing very little by that closing time.
Switch to regeneration though .... then closing early with waste gate opened can underfill the cylinder, to ultimately reduce pumping loss as it comes up to TDC and compression. This reduction effectively a gain for torque travelling through crankshaft to MGU-K destination. Coupled with late, after TDC fuelling and ignition event (retarded in braking phase of driver demand) possibly firing at 1 in 4 possibilities, could ultimately keep as much transmission torque available for regeneration while crankshaft torque is not called by driver. Downshift "blip" facilitated by ignition & fuel advances to remove peak torque demand from MGU-K from gearbox dogs.
A misfire type pulse is audible (possibly from that late burn timing) out through exhaust/waste gate exit during brake and downshift period on them, accompanied by that characteristic high pitched whine of transmission set into MGU-K architecture.
This would cut fuel use, while achieving maximum torque throughput from wheels to MGU-K in pumping loss/friction mitigation.