I remember there was some rumours of Ferrari using 3D printed pistons in their F1 engine.
Now Mahle have made some for the Porsche 911 GT2 RS, being 10% lighter, and featuring an integrated cooling gallery
They don't mention it in the video no, sorry.
Definitely not, however the point is to have lower temperatures due to better cooling and lower stresses due to a more optimal topology.
I'd be interested in what could be done with 3d printing that cannot be done with cnc now. You seem knowledgeable, can you tell us what Holy Grail can be unlocked with this tech?Mudflap wrote: ↑15 Jul 2020, 19:42Definitely not, however the point is to have lower temperatures due to better cooling and lower stresses due to a more optimal topology.
I have to say I am a bit dissapointed though, after all this talk of 3D printed pistons they have produced what is essentially a classic boxed bridge design with a standard diesel oil gallery. You can probably cast and machine that exact same shape but it's probably not as suitable for very limited production runs.
Ring lands being pounded shut sounds like a detonation problem.