toraabe wrote:Probably they are allowing the cylinder liners to be well lubricated before ignition. Can be down to " smart" scaverning rings
If oil pressure in these power units is variable apart from engine speed, via valving or variable drive, then seals & gaps could be designed to work in conjuntion.
High oil pressure + plus low engine speed might provide some of the oil smoke we're seeing.
I speculated in another thread that the pistons & conrods in these engines could be pressurized components, with internal oil channels. If so, piston ring action could be active or controllable, to the extent of controlling oil pressure feed to the rotating assembly.