joselu43, think of the four stroke cycle. At just before top dead center (TDC) on the power stroke, both valves are closed and the spark plug fires, igniting the gas/air mixture. The piston travels past TDC and travels down in it's power stroke. Then near the bottom the exhaust valve opens, and while the piston travels up the exhaust gases are expelled by compression by the piston, the expansion of the gases, and finally, inertia of the exhaust air. While the exhaust is still open, near TDC, the intake valve begins to open and cool, fuel rich fresh air starts to pour into the combustion chamber. This is the "overlap" period, and during this time most of the exhaust has left the combustion chamber, and intake air/fuel has entered it, and even begun to flow out of the exhaust valve. This is the period I was referring to, this brief overlap time. But proper timing and exhaust pipe length will see a positive pressure wave travel back down toward the exhaust valve, cram some of the fresh intake fuel/air mixture back into the combustion chamber just as the exhaust valve closes.
I once dabbled in 2-stroke engines, Ciro, with mixed failures.
I was the wrench for a pro level motocrosser in 1976 +3 years, with a CZ. We did a lot of tinkering, and I regret not patenting some of my ideas. We had got hold of early Girling gas/oil shocks and had modified the rear to give 10 inches of travel. We had built a water-cooled head that did very well, even though the radiator was a heavy steel lump scavenged from an auto heater core. We designed and successfully built a two carburetor setup, although we never solved the high tension in the springs, and it cramped the rider's right forearm terribly after 20 minutes. And we even designed and fabricated our own expansion pipe that sort of follows the path of modern motocrossers. Back then the formula for pipe dimensions was calculated by pen and paper, nothing close to modern CAD.
For three guys with almost zero fundng, we had fun, but never ironed out all the bugs and developed the systems as they deserved. But that bike made a whole bunch of power.