Piston ring

Piston ring

A piston ring is an open-ended ring that fits into a groove on the outer diameter of a piston in a reciprocating engine such as an internal combustion engine or steam engine.

The three main functions of piston rings in reciprocating engines are:

# Sealing the combustion/expansion chamber.
# Supporting heat transfer from the piston to the cylinder wall.
# Regulating engine oil consumption.

The gap in the piston ring compresses to a few thousandths of an inch when inside the cylinder bore.

Automotive

Most automotive pistons have three rings: The top two while also controlling oil are primarily for compression sealing (compression rings); the lower ring is for controlling the supply of oil to the liner which lubricates the piston skirt and the compression rings (oil control rings). Typical compression ring designs will have an essentially rectangular cross section or a keystone cross section. The periphery will then have either a barrel profile (top compression rings) or a taper napier form (second compression rings). There are some taper faced top rings and on some old engines simple plain faced rings were used.

Oil control rings typically are of three types. Single piece cast iron, helical spring backed cast iron or steel, multipiece steel. The spring backed oil rings and the cast iron oil rings have essentially the same range of peripheral forms which consist of two scraping lands of various detailed form. The multipiece oil control rings usually consist of two rails or segments (these are thin steel rings) with a spacer expander spring which keeps the two rails apart and provides the radial load.

Wear due to piston side-load

Piston rings are subject to wear as they move up and down the cylinder bore. To minimize this, they are made of wear resistant materials such as cast iron and steel and coated or treated to enhance the wear resistance. Two-stroke port design is critical to ring life. Newer modern motorcycle manufacturers have many single function but serrated ports to retain the ring. Typically, top ring and oil control rings will be coated with Chromium, or Nitrided-possibly plasma sprayed or have a PVD (physical vapour deposit) ceramic coating. For enhanced scuff resistance and further improved wear, most modern diesel engines have top rings coated with a modified chromium coating known as CKS, a patent coating from Goetze. The lower oil control ring is designed to leave a lubricating oil film, a few micrometres thick on the bore, as the piston descends. Three piece oil rings, i.e. with two rails and one spacer, are used for four-stroke gasoline engines.

Fitting new piston rings

When fitting new piston rings, the end gap is a crucial measurement. In order that a ring may be fitted into the "grooves" of the piston, it is not continuous but is broken at one point on its circumference. The ring gap may be checked by putting the ring into the bore/liner (squared to bore) and measuring with a feeler gauge. End gap should be within recommended limits for size of bore and intended "load" of engine. Metals expand with a rise in temperature, so too small a gap may result in overlapping or bending when used under hot running conditions (racing, heavy loads, towing), and even at normal temperatures, a small ring gap may lead to ring gap closure, ring breakage, bore damage and possible seizure of the piston. Too large a gap may give unacceptable compression and levels of blow-by gasses or oil consumption. When being measured in a used bore it may indicate excessive bore wear or ring wear.(Radial wear on ring face reduces thickness of used/worn ring (face wear in bore) essentially increasing face circumference of ring and thereby increasing size of ring end gap.)

When fitting new rings to a used engine, special "ridge dodger" rings are sometimes used for the top compression ring, to improve compression and oil consumption without reboring the cylinder. These have a small step of iron removed from the top section to avoid making contact with any wear ridge at the top of the cylinder, which could break a conventional ring. Generally, these are not recommended as they are probably not required and may give inferior oil consumption. A more acceptable method is to remove the wear ridge with a "ridge reamer" tool before lightly honing the bore to accept new rings.

External links

*http://www.howautowork.com/list_of_contets/part_1/ch_1/piston_rings_27.html piston rings summary video
*http://www.riken.co.jp/e/piston/index.html - Piston Ring Museum
*http://www.powersealpistonring.com - Piston Ring Manufacturer


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Piston ring — Pis ton ring (Mach.) A spring packing ring, or any of several such rings, for a piston. [Webster 1913 Suppl.] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • piston ring — n. a thin split ring fitted into a groove around a piston to seal the cylinder, transfer heat, and control cylinder wall lubrication …   English World dictionary

  • piston ring — n a circular metal spring used to stop gas or liquid escaping from between a piston and the tube that it moves in …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • piston ring — A metal, split ring installed in the groove on the outside wall of the piston. The ring contacts the sides of the ring groove and also rubs against the cylinder wall thus sealing the space between the piston and the wall. Poor rings can cause… …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • piston ring, chrome — A piston ring which has a thin layer of chrome plate on the outer edge …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • piston ring expander — A spring device placed under a piston ring to hold it snugly against the cylinder wall. Also see expander …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • piston ring flutter — The oscillations of a piston ring which mainly occur at high engine speed and thus can cause breakage …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • piston ring gap — See piston ring end gap …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • piston ring — a metallic ring, usually one of a series, and split so as to be expansible, placed around a piston in order to maintain a tight fit, as inside the cylinder of an engine. Also called packing ring, ring. [1865 70] * * * …   Universalium

  • piston ring — noun a ring or seal that fits around a piston, sealing between the piston and the bore in which it slides …   Wiktionary

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