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			 "F330 GT" wrote in message ... Two stroke engines have always made more low end torque, both motorcycle and marine. For one reason because the spark plug fires every revolution instead of every other. If you compare engines based on displacement, what you say is true. If you compare based on rated horsepower, it will be just the opposite. For a given horsepower, a 4 cycle engine will have a lot more displacement to make up for the extra two cycles it has to go through before getting to a power stroke. Engine horsepower is rated at the point of the torque curve where the hp (torque x rpm) is the highest. Not at the maximum rpm. The torque (and therefore the hp) ususally falls off very quickly at high rpms. This is true. The grind of the cam on a four stroke controls the torque curve and the maufacturer can move the maximum torque up or down the band based on duration and lift. If you consider destroying the low end torque so that you can have a lesser peak at a higher RPM "moving the maximum" then I suppose this can be considered correct. A cam built for low end torque will suffer at high rpms while a cam built for speed will suffer at low rpms. This is a simplification of a much more complicated thing. The reason that torque falls off at higher RPM is because the engine can't breath. One way of getting the engine to breath better is to open the valves sooner, wider and faster. It is the "sooner" part of that process that screws up low end. It is usually the rate that the valves can open and close that limits the upper RPM limit of a four stroke. Marine four strokes are not cam'ed for low end since they are mostly used at the higher end of the rpm band. I doubt that. When you mess up the low end, you also mess up the idle characteristics, which is important to most marine applications. Two strokes generally have a much flatter torque curve. ???? What two stroke torque curve have you been looking at? Find anyone who has ridden a two cycle motorcyle and ask them about the acceleration at low RPMs vs being "on the pipe". A conventional two stroke engine relies on the downstroke of the piston to pressurize the crankcase to force the air/fuel mixture around the piston into the cylinder. Reed valves are generally employed to prevent the air/fuel mixture from backflowing through the carburator. At lower RPMs, the reed valves are not as effective and the cylinder doesn't scavage as well. As the RPMs increase, the exhaust momentum will actually help scavange the cylinder and the engine "comes alive". In many cases, a 2 cycle is just coming to life at an RPM where a 4 cycle is starting to fall flat. Rod  | 
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