Harbor Freight Freevalve 2.0

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2021
  • What could go wrong? This is a back to basics design and I’m pretty excited to work on it a bit more and get some parts that actually seal and don’t gall as soon as they spin. All in the name of experimentation I guess.
    And as always, My social media:
    Instagram: / wesleykagan
    Patreon: / wesleykagan
    Website: www.wesleykagan.com
    For promotional inquiries: wesley.kagan@gmail.com
  • Auta a dopravní prostředky

Komentáře • 638

  • @gloriushumbug5832
    @gloriushumbug5832 Před 2 lety +385

    As a mechanical engineer in the making I love your content. This is what I love about engineering. Prototyping trying to solve problems

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +64

      Completely agree- honestly prototyping is my favorite thing to do and probably why I have so many projects laying around!

    • @captainnapalm8207
      @captainnapalm8207 Před 2 lety +18

      Pray for me, or at least wish me luck. I'm going to college in the fall for mechanical engineering. Fingers crossed. 🤞 Also, anyone else have the sudden urge to tear apart both of their go kart motors?

    • @carwashadamcooper1538
      @carwashadamcooper1538 Před 2 lety +12

      @@captainnapalm8207 take apart anything you want, just remember how it goes back together. You'll learn more from one 5hp engine than ten college "professors"
      Good luck, and don't give up.

    • @hernandovillamarinbuenaven7476
      @hernandovillamarinbuenaven7476 Před 2 lety

      @@carwashadamcooper1538 VERY accurate comment!!.
      😊🏆

    • @williamhardes8081
      @williamhardes8081 Před rokem

      @@carwashadamcooper1538 the best things ever invented for this are, the sharpie/marker, the clip lock bag and a digital camera. works every time except when you loose the bags of small components (i put them somewhere safe!) and the digital photos you took. i am very special. bet that's a good example of what not to do. DOH!

  • @WatchJRGo
    @WatchJRGo Před 2 lety +400

    That is one high-end whiteboard 💯

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +55

      Hah! Thank you. Its a nice addition to the orange wall

    • @therealboofighter
      @therealboofighter Před 2 lety +7

      I knew you had good taste, seeing you on this channel confirms this.

    • @vardfriki7274
      @vardfriki7274 Před 2 lety +3

      Curious, would a larger number of smaller holes make for snappier valve transition time with less travel and better af charge distribution?

  • @DrewLSsix
    @DrewLSsix Před 2 lety +41

    "Proof of concept, PROOF OF CONCEPT!!"
    Thus is something people just can't internalize when they criticize projects like this.

    • @keesanker4241
      @keesanker4241 Před 2 lety +2

      When I design something I love feedback, good or bad, let's me know what to fix and other important things I have to look out for, it can only make my design better. Many times before designing something I actually look out for people that have done something like I am going to design, and I read the feedback they've gotten. Makes my brain work and put a lot more thought in it

    • @youkofoxy
      @youkofoxy Před 2 lety +1

      I am just amazed at him managing to get it to work without a quad zero budget.

    • @user-he3bx2tq8b
      @user-he3bx2tq8b Před 2 lety

      @@youkofoxy механик

  • @twothreebravo
    @twothreebravo Před 2 lety +93

    "Welcome back to the Internet"
    Thanks, but I never actually leave.

    • @deesnutz42069
      @deesnutz42069 Před 2 lety +1

      I might as well have been born on this here internet. Reckon I might die on it too.

    • @twothreebravo
      @twothreebravo Před 2 lety +1

      @@deesnutz42069 sad truth.

    • @ix0s
      @ix0s Před 2 lety +1

      get off my lawn, which is littered with the remnants of AOL floppy disks!

    • @pespsisipper
      @pespsisipper Před 2 lety +1

      hehe 69 likes now

  • @Z0rr0sBlade
    @Z0rr0sBlade Před 2 lety +286

    Wesley, I'm in phoenix also, and have a chassis dyno in my home shop. Should you ever need a dyno, let me know! (I know this does not pertain to freevalve, but it could)

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +122

      Fair enough, thank you! I need to get some projects running first haha.

    • @MrMartinSchou
      @MrMartinSchou Před 2 lety +13

      I'm absolutely not a car guy, but isn't one of the advantages to freevalve supposed to be more power due to better valve control?

    • @garyhowe88
      @garyhowe88 Před 2 lety +21

      @@MrMartinSchou wouldn't say more out right power, but better driveabilty for sure, as you could essentially have the exactly amount of life you need for what ever load/rpm your at.

    • @vertigoalopolus
      @vertigoalopolus Před 2 lety +21

      @@garyhowe88 Theoretically you could do without a throttle body, using the valves themselves to control engine speed. One step better than ITB's.

    • @chikendagr8994
      @chikendagr8994 Před 2 lety +9

      @@vertigoalopolus I believe thats what BMW does

  • @TheThunderwars
    @TheThunderwars Před 2 lety +143

    You're amazing man. I have two masters in engineering and a thesis in vibrations analysis and I do some experiment on my free time. Last thing I did is accoustic tuning on all my vehicles at exactly the expected peak power rpm, a lot of experiment, a lot of 3D printing for velocity stacks, and a lot of time spent for a few hard earned bhp. But the fun is in trying...

    • @georgertheexplorer4114
      @georgertheexplorer4114 Před 2 lety +8

      right? even if its not the most time effective way to get power it sounds so cool to figure that stuff out and make it work

    • @billsmith8994
      @billsmith8994 Před 2 lety +7

      because that's truly your own creation, not someone else, not something on any other car, its a true custom modification, something that I aspire to do myself, its not about the hp it never really is, its about it being yours, and I can say confidently thats you've really made your car yours. =)

    • @1mawesomel1kethat
      @1mawesomel1kethat Před 2 lety +2

      I've thought about this myself but haven't gone into too much depth, wouldn't it be possible to use thermoacoustic refrigeration to keep engine coolant at the proper temperature without the use of a radiator, it seems like it would be an effective way at removing heat without sending coolant through a car component that has a pretty high change of failure.

    • @projector7141
      @projector7141 Před rokem +1

      Gonna do the same for my velocity stacks on an Alfa Romeo. They start of oval and are fed by a cylindrical plenum each. So gonna start off with a hull() to smooth the transition.

    • @Minienthusiast
      @Minienthusiast Před 4 měsíci

      @@projector7141please post your content! I'm your first sub

  • @zh.6795
    @zh.6795 Před 2 lety +115

    I never understand anything that is said, however, it is still very interesting.

    • @calholli
      @calholli Před 2 lety +3

      @MrAbletospeak Like a woman.

    • @Digital-Dan
      @Digital-Dan Před 2 lety +2

      He's replacing the normal way of opening and closing engine valves (a spinning cam timed with the movement of the piston) with sensors, pneumatic valve moving devices, and a computer to control the whole thing. It has some advantages, and ultimately could be cheaper, if it weren't for the fact that electric motors are going to replace these crazy machines anyhow.

    • @km6832
      @km6832 Před 2 lety

      Likewise, i watches this twice and still dont grasp it. But i thought he revised the pneumatic system, not create a new one

    • @Dappersworth
      @Dappersworth Před 2 lety +2

      @@Digital-Dan If car manufacturers actually made gas vehicles as efficient as they could, cars would have 5 gallon gas tanks max. 100+ mpg easy. But they gotta keep gasoline companies making as much money as possible so that'll never happen.

    • @ThomasBrandell
      @ThomasBrandell Před 2 lety

      @@Dappersworth the main reason that they aren’t more efficient (mpg-wise) is more due to the weight of the vehicle, where a lot of the mass comes in the form of safety equipment and comfort. Cars are designed to plastically deform in the case of an accident, which is a significant portion of the car’s weight. College clubs make vehicles that can go over 100mpg all the time, but they are not fast, comfortable, or safe to drive in normal roads. Not everything is a conspiracy. A bigger gripe I have is the additional government backing traditional ICE manufacturers had been getting compared to EV’s

  • @twentylush
    @twentylush Před 2 lety +56

    RTJ3? A man of jewel running i see

  • @calholli
    @calholli Před 2 lety +39

    This rotary valve is exactly how the intake valve works on Rotax 2 stroke engines for snowmobiles. It works super reliably.

    • @brianb-p6586
      @brianb-p6586 Před 2 lety +7

      Sure, but it's not in the top of the combustion chamber.

    • @richardprice5978
      @richardprice5978 Před 2 lety +6

      unfortunately rotary valves have hard time sealing and leak /wear /burn oil more typically than poppet valves do plus it can be challenging to manage thermals to a manageable working temperature for most materials ect. so i see this as probably being a dead end engineering experiment / exorcise wise to solve the problems ( closest to solving the problems in 80+ years is coats international INC. used in stand by 1MWH+ V16 power generators ) ( and pre-14~ year old me had a idea 💡 similar to wesley's 💡's mixed with coats camshaft with 2 stepper motors pur-head / bank plus geared sleeve valves for 2 stroke mode ect. sort of but different and in a X20 cylinder engine 9+L ( 1000 CI ) size 120 mm bore spacing. so id love it to work just to vindicate my ideas that i still like but can't build it now as i don't have any big real manufacturing capacity aka a large cnc mill to do so and now to European union /EPA is being a party pooper 🚽 so i don't know what would happen if i did get it to start legally speaking let alone put it in something ) you would have a easier time using rotary sleeve valves aka rotating sleeves with holes to time it and some of this i have considered using on my v8 so that's how I know about it plus if can get it to seal " it will have less thrust wear and scuffing ring /piston wear " but thats not my word or work but would like to put that to the test i don't know if that matters in my application or not or would be a noticeable differences as im using funky to the v8 crowd nissan VCR turbo style rods.
      im using 16 ( split into 2 mechanical sections for the 2:1 24x24mm lift rollers as i don't have as much faith in computers not to screw up ( and my camshaft is a back up for no ecu/fails safe mode ) as others like catiapiler tried it in the 1990's-2010 ish with the huwi system ( used on the ford 7.3 powestroke engine for ⛽️ control and other ones ect. ) aka no camshaft for both diesel injection timing and valve timing's in a prototype semi ( 20-80 trucks /bus 🚌 delivered for testing which was successful program until it kept 💥 the same way and was o most used in regular production ) application and it failed to work reliably after 100kish-300k miles and had a rod got thorough the block and bent valves from ecu 48 vdc drivers frying/slow or sticking a little from normal carbon build up/wear unlike wesley's ( at least he can back up the coding and looks like it works correctly minus great VVL 1 to2 mm control as mine isn't as solidly coded yet as im better at the mechanical control side of things and or a little relay logic aka haven't got it to reliably start on command yet with the plc coding ) and "free valve " air systems that i can't fully 💯 trust yet and or have there own pros and cons ) jerk pumps and 16 lift cylinders ( 24 mm diameter by 16mm tall 60~ mm valves head size ) with the under side acting like ( PLC ajustable pressure control / desmotronic system / with 3k psi max hydraulic acuilator as back up ) f1 springs in conjunction with 50-110 ish on the seat steel head springs cam side is 50ish ( for start up so the valves don't smack the pistons or valve float on any parts and be in time faster ) hydraulics and 2 LT4 30*or-30* phasers ( front is a gear drive with one scissor gear and phaser acting as a vibration damper to quite it down and for the ecu signals like cam position aka same as the LT4 chevy ) and 60mm cam pattern full racing v8 310ish square duration ( 7k max after = 💥 normal rpm 5-6k red line ) max ramp jerk rate grind 2:1 rocker ratio 8 mm to 16 mm full lift with the computer ( measured at the vary top of the 10 mm oil cooled hollow valve stem and tulip head and keepers and retainers with the sensors ( i will try laser pointed downward at the tip or hall effect / magnetic on the outside of the top of the lifter bore housing under the valve covers / cylinder hemi heads ) just like different ways a spintron keeps track of the valves / strategy's of controlling the valves for camshaft development as i don't care as much about the pumpers as long as the rollers/valve train don't self destruct 💥 and or fuel control ⛽️ and spark ⚡️ control ) cutting it in half and minim lift is 2mm~ ( unless its in skip-fire mode / v4 mode then its 0 lift ) computer settings for a pattern ish as the gen-4 viper is a v10 72* firing angle vs 90* v8 and or v8 ford voodoo firing order which is what im thinking 🤔 of switching it to instead of leaving it alone. Similar ideas 💡 to the tiger stark engine 2L and other engines set up to time my current charger 440+ci ( 108X114mm stroke) dodge. A way over simplified explanation for youtube comment section if someone whats i guess you can find my other web posts about it to find more details about it or ask me

    • @DiscoFang
      @DiscoFang Před 2 lety +8

      Uuhh not quite "exactly". Rotax rotary valves aren't exposed to combustion pressures at all, they inlet into the crankcase.

    • @ACatKrom
      @ACatKrom Před 2 lety +1

      Rotax hasnt used a rotary valve in well over 20 years. Its been almost 30 years since they released a new engine that used RV instead of reeds. Even then the RV was between the carb and crankcase.

    • @iwalker1985
      @iwalker1985 Před 2 lety

      It’s called desmodromics in a Ducati. Spoke too soon I was referring to the beginning of the video. You are correct about the rotary valves but if I’m not mistaken they were two stroke engines as opposed to this 4 stroke engine.

  • @JerGol
    @JerGol Před 2 lety +70

    Stoked to see you've reached 100k subs! Thoroughly deserved. 👏🏼😎

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +16

      Thank you! It’s still crazy to me haha.

    • @zidarfpv348
      @zidarfpv348 Před 2 lety +4

      @@WesleyKagan I think it's crazy too, the miata freevalve video was the most fake video i've ever seen.....

    • @SaintBuick
      @SaintBuick Před 2 lety +5

      @@zidarfpv348 Oh look, a troll.

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Před 2 lety

      @@WesleyKagan Oh yes I meant to say congratulations as well! One of the fastest growing channels I have seen in quite some time. Well deserved.

    • @calholli
      @calholli Před 2 lety

      @@WesleyKagan It shouldn't be that crazy... You're like a rocket scientist over here.

  • @stuart207
    @stuart207 Před 2 lety

    Dude you are one of the first trying to adapt the free valve here on yt...
    ONE OF THE FIRST!
    Do not give up on this mate, its the future tech everyone wants.

  • @JoshPutnam1
    @JoshPutnam1 Před 2 lety

    Next, a 392 hemi freevalve! Imagine the game change of re-engineering the MDS so that the lifters don't wear to failure... Not to mention running it two stroke, or with a gas diesel mixture. Dude, I love your videos. And with your open-source mentality, I think you're a good human being too. Rock on

  • @100PercentJake
    @100PercentJake Před 2 lety +57

    Keeping those rotary valves sealed in any kind of actual ICE application seems like it would be a nightmare. I'm looking forward to how you tackle this issue.

    • @budgreenjeans2001
      @budgreenjeans2001 Před 2 lety +6

      Wait till you see “two stroke stuffing”

    • @GregoryVeizades
      @GregoryVeizades Před 2 lety +6

      You could use side seals like what Rotary engines have.

    • @CRbbt
      @CRbbt Před 2 lety +13

      I believe sealing the combustion chamber is the main issue holding back most rotary valve designs and the non-uniform heating of the valve

    • @m3chanist
      @m3chanist Před 2 lety +2

      Aprilla, rotax, canam etc all managed it

    • @brianb-p6586
      @brianb-p6586 Před 2 lety +13

      @@m3chanist No, I don't think they did. Rotary valves in two-stroke engines normally just modify effective port opening, so they're not exposed to the combustion chamber near the top of the stroke (and thus peak pressures and temperatures).

  • @MrHamof
    @MrHamof Před 2 lety +59

    So apparently this can be accessed from the playlist even though it's unlisted.

    • @JohnDobak
      @JohnDobak Před 2 lety +2

      sorcery

    • @calholli
      @calholli Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah.. I've seen that on many channels.

  • @SingleHandedly
    @SingleHandedly Před 2 lety +7

    Just be glad you live where sweat evaporates. I’m looking at you, Florida.

  • @stevenbaumann1592
    @stevenbaumann1592 Před 2 lety +1

    A negative result is still a result. As long as you keep learning and improving the design you will have a pretty neat system when you are all done. Keep up the good work these are pretty fun to watch.

  • @onefastgmc
    @onefastgmc Před 2 lety +15

    Man between this and liquid piston, I'm super excited for the future of the internal combustion engine. Free valve tech theoretically means you have unlimited tuning capabilities over the valve train up to the limit of whatever system works the best among other systems such as ignition. Super cool!

    • @ro63rto
      @ro63rto Před 2 lety

      Whelp, in Europe bthey want to ban the sale of new cars with petrol engines from 2030 onwards so we'll probably never see this tech on our roads.

    • @3th1xs
      @3th1xs Před 2 lety

      @@ro63rto but maybe our lawnmowers!

    • @geemy9675
      @geemy9675 Před rokem

      yes freevalve does take engine tuning to the next level. you can have different valve lift, duration and timing for every combination of throttle, engine load, rpm, o2 sensor, intake air temperature.... with powerful electronics, lots of sensor, and smart software you can have "perfect" combustion, AF ratio, power and effficiency in every condition. you can also have self tuning software
      you can also modify the cycle like atkinson for efficiency, get rid of throttle body and pumping loss, bring the engine to temperature quicker, add some "air brake" engine breaking,
      but also, if the manufacturers does a really good job from the beginning, there is not much you can improve. basically you can reduce reliability/efficiency at full load and increase the parameters like redline, max valve duration/overlap

  • @ebrewste
    @ebrewste Před 2 lety +17

    Computer controlled rotary valves? Yes please!

  • @deltacharlieecho4732
    @deltacharlieecho4732 Před 2 lety +2

    Between you and StuffMadeHere I don't know who does more of the "it's not right but lets do it anyway" stuff. Thank god for you both.

  • @OCtheG
    @OCtheG Před 2 lety +7

    You’ve inspired me to get a version of this running on a 3.7L V6 Mustang! Can’t wait for the open source files

    • @MrMaxitaple
      @MrMaxitaple Před 2 lety +2

      Keep us update

    • @OCtheG
      @OCtheG Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrMaxitaple You got it, I’m currently in the process of allocating the middle armrest cigarette lighter to a 5V VRM module to power a raspberry Pi to be the microcontroller for this new functionality, as long as it’s in there also trying to get an active aero spoiler set up based off the speedometer voltage wire. I’ll definitely update if and when I get it functionally online!

    • @mshenay
      @mshenay Před 2 lety +1

      @@OCtheG looking forward to your progress

  • @paulpas
    @paulpas Před 2 lety

    Awesome. I had come to the same "knife gate" approach on my designs about 15 years ago. I'm happy to see it being explored.

  • @htownblue11
    @htownblue11 Před 2 lety +2

    When genius meets creativity meets intelligent humor you get Wes and his epic mechanical journey adventures. Never stop my man. Congrats on 100K!!! Truthfully you deserve a few million at least.

  • @jesperwall839
    @jesperwall839 Před 2 lety +14

    I love this channel for the same reason I love the channel 2stroke Stuffing. Great ideas and the guts to try them out in real life 👍😀

  • @jayinmi3706
    @jayinmi3706 Před 2 lety +7

    Wow, your channel has really taken off! Congrats! This was the project that brought me here, but the V12 Vette is also piquing my interest

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks! Yeah, I’m trying to continue a few of these projects instead of starting new ones ahah.

  • @Nevir202
    @Nevir202 Před 2 lety +2

    I had a similar idea once, though it was using a very large cam which was partially cut away so that it acted as the intake runner as it spun.
    This is really cool to see.

  • @motoxmuseum
    @motoxmuseum Před 2 lety

    Using a rotary disk to act as the valves for a 4-stroke was my graduate project in 1980. It was based on a Honda XL250 engine. Obviously, a mechanical drive system as this level of electronics was not available at that time. The design used an elliptical drive gear to speed up and slow down the rotation of the valve so the valve was moving as slow as possible at the peak point of cylinder pressure. The rotary valve was sealed used a Dykes - ring or L-ring in the head against the valve. This used the cylinder pressure as a force against the ring to seal. The design was in my opinion very workable however the amount of funding needed to build a prototype meant it would only exist as a paper design. Of course, I was not the first person to conceptualize a rotary valve for a 4-stroke engine. There were several designs done in the pre-world War 2 era for aircraft engines in the UK. Those designs were based on a cone that rotated on the outside of the combustion chamber. There was enough data from these engines to show that a rotary valve design would have enormous advantages in fuel consumption and performance. The challenge was resolving the mechanical challenges to have a reliable engine. Ultimately, the use of a rotary disk creates disadvantages with the bore of the engine and the bore-to-bore spacing making it a questionable technology for multi-cylinder engines. It is fun to see someone 41 years later still working on the concept. Good luck.

  • @singerdesign
    @singerdesign Před 2 lety +1

    Such a badass, really enjoy how you're improving the production quality of the videos too.

  • @Arkoss
    @Arkoss Před 2 lety

    There is something about your method that I really enjoy.
    Keep bringing these kinds of videos. They never seem to last enough hahah, I could watch hours of you experimenting with stuff

  • @greenthumb9406
    @greenthumb9406 Před 2 lety +1

    Damn, you grew so fast I can’t even keep track! 100k already, congratulations, keep up the great work. I wouldn’t really call myself “technical” but all the experiments and everything keeps me entertained.

  • @grantbierlmeier7641
    @grantbierlmeier7641 Před 2 lety

    Wow. I had thought of this basic valve configuration a long time ago as I am sure others did too. However I lack the intelligence training and skills to ever try and implement the concept. All this is to say - wow again - SO cool!

  • @A9KKK
    @A9KKK Před 2 lety

    Hey I am just about to go into mechatronics engineering in university next school year and to be honest all of your videos get me so excited and only affirm my interest in the field. I love the way you genuinely tackle all of your video topics with a full engineering approach. Just wanted to say thanks for making me even more sure of my decision to go into this field!

  • @thechemtrailkid
    @thechemtrailkid Před 2 lety

    oh man, thank you for this. i've always wondered if valve of this design would even work. super cool stuff man

  • @aaronrobinson7320
    @aaronrobinson7320 Před 2 lety

    Greatest automotive engineering channel on CZcams!! Love your work!

  • @benpearson1825
    @benpearson1825 Před 2 lety +2

    I hope I can one day have my own space to work on my car like this. You don't have an abundance of machinery or tools, but you are still able to tackle incredibly complex projects. Congrats on 100k subs and I just joined your patreon!

  • @StingrayOfficial
    @StingrayOfficial Před 2 lety

    100,000!!! Well deserved!!! Awesome stuff.

  • @mattclark1429
    @mattclark1429 Před 2 lety +1

    I appreciate your content. Makes me want to experiment in a broken lawnmower engine now.

  • @ale6242
    @ale6242 Před 2 lety

    Damn, i love this shit. Amazing stuff. Love the speed at which you put these complex things together!

  • @christianmccollum1028
    @christianmccollum1028 Před 2 lety

    Awesome hypothesis, print/build, and experimentation! Keep at it, man. You are definitely heading in the right direction!

  • @mikecobb8328
    @mikecobb8328 Před 2 lety

    Nice job Wesley!!! I accidentally stumbled across your video in researching engine efficiency, as I’m developing a Hot Vapor Engine. You design is the closest I’ve ever seen to a design I had in 1984. The largest difference between yours and mine is, mine was 100%. Smokey Yunick said the RPM to any reasonable engine is the valve train. I wish you were closer to Houston, we could perfect it and build some things! I have an incredible fabricator/machinist, and Ex-NASA friends for programming.

  • @jebysblog
    @jebysblog Před 2 lety

    Messing with rotary disc valves, this is exactly how Herr Felix Wankel started! If you look on the interweb you can find a lot of material about his early works with rotary valves and how he solved the sealing issues for the valve sitting on the engine head. A V8 engine with disc valves was actually placed in a German torpedo

  • @VolV8
    @VolV8 Před 2 lety

    Really enjoying your work.
    Thanks for the upload ✌️

  • @danielplumley2649
    @danielplumley2649 Před 2 lety

    Please keep working on this! I love the freevalve videos

  • @simoncosta7111
    @simoncosta7111 Před 2 lety

    Love the wall mount computer good luck with da build

  • @doug5541
    @doug5541 Před 2 lety

    that is cool best of luck to ya getting it were ya want it i cant wait to see it along the way

  • @tommasomincuzzi8560
    @tommasomincuzzi8560 Před 2 lety +5

    Time for a free-sleeve-valve system! With the Arduino controlling the sleeve phasing, maybe with two sleeves rotating separately, each one controlled by the Arduino

  • @jakobboers5067
    @jakobboers5067 Před 2 lety

    I understand about 5% of what you're talking about but it's fascinating. Good stuff man!

  • @ajgonzalez5109
    @ajgonzalez5109 Před 2 lety

    I love Wesley's taste in music, RTJ rocks!!

  • @atypicalbnc
    @atypicalbnc Před 2 lety +1

    Oh man, I feel your pain. I work for a company that uses a large amount of pneumatically-automated equipment. The variability in machine behavior on a daily basis following any change in the local weather has been a sufficient motivator to start migrating the automation systems away from pneumatics.

  • @Ricochet1012
    @Ricochet1012 Před 2 lety

    This is awesome keep it up! As an ME I love this content! Gives me inspiration to try to get a shop of tools like yours to try this on an LS I have.

  • @hotmalevb
    @hotmalevb Před 2 lety +1

    This reminds me a rotary valve engine. Something I wanted to build for a long time. I love the ingenuity. Keep it up.

    • @calholli
      @calholli Před 2 lety

      Rotax 2 strokes have rotary intake valves.

    • @hotmalevb
      @hotmalevb Před 2 lety

      Sorry I meant Rotary Valve Head. There are no springs on the valves, just a rotating ports that line up with the ports in the head just like what Wesley is doing. I am not familiar with the Rotax, but something I will need to check out.

    • @brianb-p6586
      @brianb-p6586 Před 2 lety

      @@calholli Yes, but those two-stroke intake control rotary valves are not exposed to the combustion chamber, so they're much more practical.

  • @josephmills7186
    @josephmills7186 Před 2 lety

    congrats on 100k! love the videos dude (been here since first porschekart vid i saw on reddit)

  • @mrawesomelemons
    @mrawesomelemons Před 2 lety +1

    This is just one of the best channels on CZcams.

  • @derkameramann
    @derkameramann Před 2 lety

    Im exited! Not only the winner of the James Watt Lookalikecontest but also happily experimenting on the true Sound of Steamengines.

  • @THEONLYNIKOMATH
    @THEONLYNIKOMATH Před 2 lety

    I've probably checked your channel over 20 times since you last video waiting for more. Love the content and keep it up. My dad has a very similar jaguar that he needs to get running 😅.

  • @nathand7560
    @nathand7560 Před 2 lety +2

    No one can deny this man puts out unique content 👌

  • @Sovereign86
    @Sovereign86 Před 2 lety

    This is dope! Looking forward to your progress!

  • @B0RN2RACE100
    @B0RN2RACE100 Před 2 lety

    I swear I was subscribed, but I fixed that now, top notch presentation and material.

  • @taylorboultinghouse8296

    Keep up that quality work! Best of luck getting a tried and tested rendition!

  • @budyeddi5814
    @budyeddi5814 Před 2 lety +1

    Some of the best content on YT!! Always a treat to see you've posted a new video ^_^

  • @jflo4073
    @jflo4073 Před 2 lety +5

    I would probably explore the idea of solenoids controlling the oil flow to hydraulic cam actuators. Oil, not air because squishiness. And in a car engine you already have oil pressure to work with, just like in variable timing applications.

    • @Ozmandius
      @Ozmandius Před 2 lety

      Except when the engine isn't running. Then oil pressure needs time to build, you know, when the engine is running.

    • @OMY005
      @OMY005 Před 2 lety +1

      Fiat/Alfa Romeo do similar to this with their multiair engines?

    • @thetrainshop
      @thetrainshop Před 2 lety

      @@Ozmandius prelube pump, or something similar to how CATs HEUI system worked but with a wholly separate electric driven hydraulic system.

  • @allensmith8953
    @allensmith8953 Před 2 lety

    Loving it! Thanks for an update. 👍👍👍

  • @802Garage
    @802Garage Před 2 lety +3

    Really fun man! Most of my ideas for "free valve" style technology involve stepper motors. Not that I've even concepted one in CAD. Can't wait for another experimentation update.

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety +4

      Thanks! Yeah will do, I’ll post some updates as I get it to work better

    • @brianb-p6586
      @brianb-p6586 Před 2 lety +1

      Individual stepper motors running individual camshafts for each valve is the Camcon "Intelligent Valve Actuation" (IVA) design. www.motorauthority.com/news/1119099_fully-digital-valves-could-change-the-future-of-the-combustion-engine

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Před 2 lety

      @@brianb-p6586 Thanks! I know I saw an article on it quite some time ago and could not find the same one. This is what most of my thoughts are on. It opens up countless possibilities never really considered for combustion engines.

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Před 2 lety +1

      @@brianb-p6586 I see they are already doing one of the main things I had thought of, which is an engine that can switch to 2 stroke, 6 stroke, 8 stroke, and in their case 12 stroke which I hadn't gone that far, hahaha. Cylinder deactivation can also of course be far more efficient. Jake braking also an option for all vehicles. Anyways, tons of cool possibilities.

  • @Venturestarx
    @Venturestarx Před 2 lety

    This is similar to a valve system I invented about 17 years ago. Very cool!

  • @TheCooldude534
    @TheCooldude534 Před 2 lety

    Let’s go Wesley is getting big miss seeing your crazy cars at highschool

  • @Ominous.1
    @Ominous.1 Před 2 lety

    i heard about you on a podcast they were talking bout free valve application if used on a motorcycle.. i subscribed! cool stuff, and the ducati reference sealed it for me haha

  • @choochoorunner
    @choochoorunner Před 2 lety

    Vừa vào đã nổi cả da gà 藍giọng a Phúc hayyy quá, mong sẽ tiếp tục cover ạ ❤️

  • @CMBProjects
    @CMBProjects Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant job man!

  • @jimmac521
    @jimmac521 Před 2 lety +4

    surface of Venus perhaps... as Elton John sang, "Mars ain't no kinda place to raise a kid. In fact it's cold as hell."

  • @TheGranolaForce
    @TheGranolaForce Před 2 lety

    Hi keep up the great work, this is an awesome project.

  • @ericchambers9023
    @ericchambers9023 Před 2 lety +1

    If you continue with the stepper motor design, you should look into using servo motors instead. Built in encoder position feedback, so you can have the microcontroller know where the valve actually is.

  • @joerodriguez4130
    @joerodriguez4130 Před rokem

    Just found your channel n love the way you think. I myself am determined to design and blueprint my own combustion motor with least amount of parts and resistance, while being as efficient as possible

  • @dolfandon7124
    @dolfandon7124 Před 2 lety

    What a cool idea! Here's hoping for success

  • @NotJo4Ever13
    @NotJo4Ever13 Před 2 lety

    Dude. I don’t know how I found your channel… and I don’t know how you are so smart… but jeezuz you are farking brilliant. Keep it up!!!!!

  • @Oldsmobile69
    @Oldsmobile69 Před 2 lety

    I remember seeing a documentary in the 90's about an engine where instead of valves it had a thick cam that just had notches cut in it to let the air out/in. Probably had some serious air mixing or timing issues or it would be in common use today.

  • @rob180bhp5
    @rob180bhp5 Před 2 lety

    I have no words available every video amazes and entertains ,some failure is also successful keep it going 👍

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Yeah it’s a lot of trial and working through issues!

  • @CamelGarage
    @CamelGarage Před 2 lety

    Wes!! You’re amazing! Keep up the great work man!

  • @w0nd3rlu573r
    @w0nd3rlu573r Před 2 lety

    Thank you very much for experimenting.

  • @MikkoRantalainen
    @MikkoRantalainen Před 2 lety

    Great work as usual!

  • @nateking6629
    @nateking6629 Před 2 lety

    Hi, I saw your channel from the comment you left on Drew Gooden's video and I'm glad I did. I watched your video on mechanical CPU's, and I'm looking forward to the continuation of it!

  • @davidelang
    @davidelang Před 2 lety +1

    I love the work. I've been noodling over a design for a steam engine with cylinders arranged like the bullets in a revolver for years, and one thing I've been thinking of is having one large disk to act as the valves, one radius matching the intake, another matching the exhaust. This wouldn't be as compact as what you did here, but only needs one motor (I was planning to gear it directly to the crankshaft for the steam engine) and the effective valve area would be able to be much larger.

  • @oliverjd26
    @oliverjd26 Před 2 lety +1

    Just seen the Donut Media video on freevalve cars and now am to your channel. First visit here.

  • @Nebbia_affaraccimiei
    @Nebbia_affaraccimiei Před 2 lety +4

    100k!!! congrats

  • @WildcatWarrior15
    @WildcatWarrior15 Před 2 lety

    MechE here: I lost it at "Air Squishyness Formula".
    If everything is shiny and perfect, you're not trying hard enough! Keep it up!

  • @GleepGlop2
    @GleepGlop2 Před 2 lety +1

    Congrats on 100k!

  • @tycro
    @tycro Před 2 lety +2

    Congrats on the 100k!

  • @michaelappleman6172
    @michaelappleman6172 Před 2 lety

    Rotary (and sleeve) valves have an ancient and illustrious history, especially in 2-strokes where they made the MZ's, and soon after the Japanese grand prix bikes unstoppable in the 1960's-70's, but in those engines they were upstream of the combustion chamber and didn't have to deal with sealing high compression in a 4 stroke or deal with exhaust temperature. If you can figure out how to solve those problems, you'll be an engineering superhero!

  • @aaronrickard4675
    @aaronrickard4675 Před 2 lety

    Kawasaki used a similar design on their 2 cycle enduros back in the day called a rotary valve timed on the crankshaft super cool vid👍

  • @TheMapleDaily
    @TheMapleDaily Před 2 lety

    You are awesome! Love this type of stuff, I am a young and inspired engineer!

  • @krickkraft1672
    @krickkraft1672 Před 2 lety

    This heat is kicking my ass too. All my projects are on hold for the summer. the sun makes my skin try to kill me so I dont have a choice

  • @discontinuuity
    @discontinuuity Před 2 lety

    Rotary valves are nothing new, but I've never heard of anyone using stepper motors to move them. I can see this design having trouble with sealing, thermal expansion, and/or clogging up with combustion products. But it's a cool proof of concept. If you have trouble with sealing you could try Corliss valves.
    The pneumatic valves are still worth pursuing if you ask me. The pilot-operated valves located close to the head sound like a good idea. If differences in air temp are the problem you could put the air lines in a water jacket to keep everything consistent.

  • @sandpiper1515
    @sandpiper1515 Před 2 lety +4

    A car I think you would be interested in is to 1996-1999 Taurus SHO with the 3.4 v8. I seem to like the cars you like and think you may find it interesting.

  • @tiitsaul9036
    @tiitsaul9036 Před 2 lety

    Love your work

  • @Frignothanks
    @Frignothanks Před 2 lety +16

    It’s 78 today and I’m dying in the sun. No idea how you all handle it in the desert states.

  • @Thermosmcjug
    @Thermosmcjug Před 2 lety +1

    Neat! Would love to see you do a stepper motor w rotating ball valves using a similar principle/might improve flow?

  • @hondatech5000
    @hondatech5000 Před 2 lety

    Gates what a fantastic idea. Two stroke turbo Miata ftw

  • @thebibidu
    @thebibidu Před 2 lety

    Cool project!
    The disc distribution is similar to 2 stroke 500 Suzuki RG gamma.
    I used this idea in final year project, only I used hollow camshafts with ports that would align to intake and exhaust. I think sealing a rotating tube is somewhat easier.
    Good luck on future iterations, I'll watch them with great interest!

    • @WesleyKagan
      @WesleyKagan  Před 2 lety

      Thank you! Yeah, 2 stroke engines have had this for a while, but they are mechanically controlled of course. And

  • @PyroFactor101
    @PyroFactor101 Před 2 lety +1

    Add a nut and bolt running though the shaft of the valve to strengthen it a bit, you should also give pteg or asa a try before going through the trouble of making it out of aluminum

  • @Turboy65
    @Turboy65 Před 8 měsíci

    Funny thing is, I was thinking about what we now call Freevalve technology back in the early 90s. I had no way to turn my thoughts into reality. But realistically we probably didn't have the technology to do it at the time, not with a REASONABLY sized controller.

  • @JoeyLovesTrains
    @JoeyLovesTrains Před 2 lety +2

    Congrats on 100k subs!

  • @marshr32
    @marshr32 Před 2 lety +1

    Love the stuff you're doing here, the experimentation and free thinking is awesome.
    Was watching this and thinking....closed loop drivers like the S57B from aliexpress could help with your valve positioning accuracy. And maybe an optical crank angle sensor like the cam sensors on 90's nissan engines eg rb20 vg30 sr20 would be more robust in terms of missing pulses?