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Encyclopedia > Twingle engine

The Twingle engine is a small-capacity two-stroke gasoline engine. It uses two pistons, one of which controls the inlet ports, the other the exhaust ports. These run in two parallel cylinder bores but share a single combustion chamber, spark plug and cylinder head.


The first Twingle engine was designed by Alberto Garelli, who patented the design in 1912. His design had a forked connecting rod with two little-ends and one big-end, and had a capacity of 346cc. Garelli produced some motorcycles with this engine, but was more successful with more conventional designs.


Two versions of the Twingle engine were produced by Austrian moped manufacturer Puch. The earlier, based on the Garelli design, was produced from 1923. From 1949 this was replaced by a design by Giovanni Marcellino, with different sized pistons and a more elaborate connecting-rod setup. The Marcellino engine continued in production until 1970. It was complex and expensive to produce compared to a conventional single cylinder engine, and heavier for the same power output. Its only advantage was claimed to be fuel efficiency.


Both the Garelli and Marcellino engines are sometimes described as two-cylinder and sometimes as one-cylinder. Possibly as a result, the Twingle is sometimes confused with the opposed piston two-stroke diesel engine design, which has two pistons per cylinder at opposite ends of the cylinder, and no cylinder head at all. Like the Twingle, the opposed piston design uses one piston to control the inlet ports and another the exhaust, but there the similarity ends.


It is easy to see how a Twingle engine could be mistaken for a single cylinder engine. It looks, sounds and in most ways performs like one, and has only one spark plug, but in fact the Twingle has two pistons each in its own separate cylinder bore.


External links

  • Garelli engine (http://members.aon.at/mfs/oldies/puch.htm).
  • Marcellino engine (http://204.29.80.50/restore/allstate.htm).
  • Unofficial Garelli motorcycles (http://users.iafrica.com/g/gc/gclark/garelli/garelli.html) site.
  • History of Garelli motorcycles (http://www.motorold.it/storia/history/garelli/garelli.htm) machine translated from Italian.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Talk:Opposed piston engine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (359 words)
This site also has a description of a later two-piston engine designed by Giovanni Marcellino, but with different sized pistons and a more elaborate connecting-rod setup, which seems to be the twingle engine described at this website.
Both engines were manufactured by Puch at their Graz works, the Marcellino design replacing the Garelli, and are described at the first site as one-cylinder double-piston two-stroke engines, but I'd describe them both as having two parallel cylinders sharing a single cylinder-head.
The designer appears to wish to use the term, but his engine does not seem to have been built or demonstrated, and until it is the existing engines surely have priority on the name.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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