An opposed-piston engine is a piston engine in which each cylinder has a piston at both ends, and no cylinder head. Petrol and diesel opposed-piston engines have been used, mostly in large scale applications such as ships, military tanks and in factories.
Design
Compared to contemporary two-stroke engines which used a conventional design of one piston per cylinder, the advantages of the opposed-piston engine were:
Eliminating the cylinder head and valvetrain, which reduces weight, complexity, cost, heat loss and friction loss of the engine.
Creating a uniflow-scavenged movement of gas through the combustion chamber, which avoided the drawbacks associated with the contemporary crossflow-scavenged designs.
A reduced height of the engine.
However the main drawback was that the power from the two opposing pistons has to be geared together. This added weight and complexity when compared to conventional piston engines, which simply use a single crankshaft as the power output. The most common layout was to use two crankshafts, with the crankshafts geared together. The Koreyvo, Jumo and Napier Deltic engines used one piston per cylinder to expose an intake port, and the other to expose an exhaust port. Each piston is referred to as either an intake piston or an exhaust piston depending on its function in this regard. This layout gives superior scavenging, as gas flow through the cylinder is axial rather than radial, and simplifies design of the piston crowns. In the Jumo 205 and its variants, the upper crankshaft serves the exhaust pistons, and the lower crankshaft the intake pistons. In designs using multiple cylinder banks, each big end bearing serves one inlet and one exhaust piston, using a forked connecting rod for the exhaust piston.
History
1880s to 1930s
One of the first opposed-piston engines was the 1882 Atkinson differential engine. The Atkinson differential engine has a power stroke on every rotation of the crankshaft, however it was not a commercial success. In 1898, an Oechelhäuser two-stroke opposed-piston engine producing was installed at the Hoerde ironworks. This design of engine was also produced under licence by manufacturers including Deutsche Kraftgas Gesellschaft in Germany and William Beardmore & Sons Ltd in the United Kingdom. In 1901, the Kansas City Lightning Balanced Gas and Gasoline Engines were gasoline engines producing. An early opposed-piston car engine was produced by the French company Gobron-Brillié around 1900. In April 1904 a Gobron-Brillié car powered by the opposed-piston engine was the first car ever to exceed 150km/h with a "World's Record Speed" of. On 17 July 1904, the Gobron-Brillié car became the first to exceed for the flying kilometre. The engine used a single crankshaft at one end of the cylinders and a crosshead for the opposing piston. The first diesel engine with opposed pistons was a prototype built at Kolomna Works in Russia. The designer, Raymond A. Koreyvo, patented the engine in France on 6 November 1907 and displayed the engine at international exhibitions, however it did not reach production. The Kolomna design used a typical layout of two crankshafts connected by gearing. In 1914, the Simpson's Balanced 2-Stroke motorcycle engine was the first opposed-piston engine to use a single crankshaft beneath the centre of the cylinders with both pistons connected by levers. This engine was a crankcase compression design, with one piston used to uncover the transfer port, and the other to open the exhaust port. The advantage of this design was to avoid the deflector crowns for pistons used by most two-stroke engines at that time. Doxford Engine Works in the United Kingdom built large opposed-piston engines for marine use, with the first Doxford engine being installed in a ship in 1921. This diesel engine used a single crankshaft at one end of the cylinders and a crosshead for the opposing piston. After World War I, these engines were produced in a number of models, such as the P and J series, with outputs as high as. Production of Doxford engines in the UK ceased in 1980. Later opposed-piston diesel engines include the 1932 Junkers Jumo 205 aircraft engine built in Germany, which had one crankshaft, using a design similar to the 1900–1922 Gobron-Brillié engines.
1940s to present
The Fairbanks Morse 38 8-1/8 diesel engine, originally designed in Germany in the 1930s, was used in U.S. submarines in the 1940s and 1950s, and in boats from the 1930s-present. It was also used in locomotives from 1944. The Commer TS3 three-cylinder diesel truck engines, released in 1954, have a single crankshaft beneath the centre of the cylinders with both pistons connected by levers. Also released in 1954 was the Napier Deltic engine military boats. It uses three crankshafts, one at each corner, to form the three banks of double-ended cylinders arranged in an equilateral triangle. The Deltic engine was later British Rail Class 55 and British Rail Class 23 locomotives and to power fast patrol boats and Royal navy mine sweepers. Beginning in 1962, Gibbs invited Mack Trucks to take part in designing FDNY’s super pumper and its companion tender. DeLaval Turbine was commissioned to design a multi-stage centrifugal pump with a Naper-Deltic T18-37C diesel to power the pumps. https://www.firerescue1.com/fire-products/fire-apparatus/articles/the-greatest-fire-pumper-the-world-has-known-TrMsI86bXHcXv1iq/ In 1959, the Leyland L60 six-cylinder diesel engine was introduced. The L60 was produced in the United Kingdom for use in the Chieftan tank. The Soviet T-64 tank, produced from 1963-1987, also used an opposed-piston diesel engine. Volvo filed for a patent in 2017.
Free-piston engine
A variation of the opposed-piston design is the free-piston engine, which was first patented in 1934. Free piston engines have no crankshaft, and the pistons are returned after each firing stroke by compression and expansion of air in a separate cylinder. Early applications were for use as an air compressor or as a gas generator for a gas turbine.