Could people of the 14th century create an inline engine for use in aircraft and vehicles?












9














If an expert of some kind travels back in time to the 14th or 15th century with modern tools and machines that don't require power to work and if he were to past on the knowledge of modern technology to a group of experts from that timeline, could they build an inline engine for use in vehicles and aircrafts? Also, with the knowledge they obtained and the tools and machinery, could they build a helicopter instead if the plane doesn't work?










share|improve this question


















  • 8




    "An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:33






  • 4




    Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
    – chasly from UK
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:54








  • 2




    Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
    – R..
    Nov 18 '18 at 20:29






  • 1




    Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
    – Spencer
    Nov 18 '18 at 22:45












  • Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
    – Mr.J
    Nov 19 '18 at 1:32
















9














If an expert of some kind travels back in time to the 14th or 15th century with modern tools and machines that don't require power to work and if he were to past on the knowledge of modern technology to a group of experts from that timeline, could they build an inline engine for use in vehicles and aircrafts? Also, with the knowledge they obtained and the tools and machinery, could they build a helicopter instead if the plane doesn't work?










share|improve this question


















  • 8




    "An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:33






  • 4




    Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
    – chasly from UK
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:54








  • 2




    Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
    – R..
    Nov 18 '18 at 20:29






  • 1




    Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
    – Spencer
    Nov 18 '18 at 22:45












  • Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
    – Mr.J
    Nov 19 '18 at 1:32














9












9








9


1





If an expert of some kind travels back in time to the 14th or 15th century with modern tools and machines that don't require power to work and if he were to past on the knowledge of modern technology to a group of experts from that timeline, could they build an inline engine for use in vehicles and aircrafts? Also, with the knowledge they obtained and the tools and machinery, could they build a helicopter instead if the plane doesn't work?










share|improve this question













If an expert of some kind travels back in time to the 14th or 15th century with modern tools and machines that don't require power to work and if he were to past on the knowledge of modern technology to a group of experts from that timeline, could they build an inline engine for use in vehicles and aircrafts? Also, with the knowledge they obtained and the tools and machinery, could they build a helicopter instead if the plane doesn't work?







science-based technology science-fiction alternate-history steampunk






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share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 18 '18 at 16:19









Eric cliffordEric clifford

11313




11313








  • 8




    "An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:33






  • 4




    Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
    – chasly from UK
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:54








  • 2




    Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
    – R..
    Nov 18 '18 at 20:29






  • 1




    Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
    – Spencer
    Nov 18 '18 at 22:45












  • Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
    – Mr.J
    Nov 19 '18 at 1:32














  • 8




    "An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:33






  • 4




    Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
    – chasly from UK
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:54








  • 2




    Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
    – R..
    Nov 18 '18 at 20:29






  • 1




    Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
    – Spencer
    Nov 18 '18 at 22:45












  • Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
    – Mr.J
    Nov 19 '18 at 1:32








8




8




"An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
– AlexP
Nov 18 '18 at 18:33




"An" expert? One? There is no one person in the world today who knows how to make the steel, and how to extract the petroleum, and how to make the fuel, and how to design the engine, and how to make the engine out of metal...
– AlexP
Nov 18 '18 at 18:33




4




4




Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
– chasly from UK
Nov 18 '18 at 18:54






Please state what tools you are taking back. Are there any modern tools that don't require power? You're not going to make an engine with a hammer and chisel.
– chasly from UK
Nov 18 '18 at 18:54






2




2




Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
– R..
Nov 18 '18 at 20:29




Why an inline engine rather than a wankel?
– R..
Nov 18 '18 at 20:29




1




1




Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
– Spencer
Nov 18 '18 at 22:45






Time to read The Flying Sorcerers again ....
– Spencer
Nov 18 '18 at 22:45














Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
– Mr.J
Nov 19 '18 at 1:32




Somehow related, worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/100995/…
– Mr.J
Nov 19 '18 at 1:32










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















13














There are too many missing technologies



There are several technologies critical to an inline engine that would not have been easily replicated in the 14th century of thereabouts




  • High quality metal. The block (and cylinders and cylinder heads and bolts, etc) are under high temperature and pressure stress during operation. Metals at the time might not have been able to handle the stress; at least, given the uneven quality of production, not all engines would work. You'd need to wait at least until the development of mass produced iron cannons in the 17th century, possibly until the steel-making changes of the First Industrial Revolution around 1800.


  • Fuel. The technology to refine crude oil into a useful gasoline by product didn't really exist. Neither does a suitable lubrication oil You would have to get an entire petrochemical industry off the ground by yourself.


  • You can't make the parts. The crankshaft (along with a cam) is necessary to control the timing of the pistons. That wasn't used widespread in Europe until the 15thc century. Valves and valve springs haven't been invented either. Pistons for compression weren't invented until 1838. Neither have the machine tools to make such finely tuned internal parts. Topping this all off, there does not exist a standard set of measurements which you could use to have craftsmen build parts of standardized sizes.


  • You need a spark plug. Which means you need to develop the technologies for integrating ceramic and metal into what is basically a capacitor. Also, you need a battery or at least an alternator to run the spark plug. Alternately, you can use compression ignition, but that just makes your metals problems in bullet point 1 that much worse.



You basically need...like....an Industrial Revolution to build an internal combustion engine. So, you can do it in the 14th century, as long as you have a ~1900 industrial base....but then you aren't really in the 14th century any more.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:31










  • ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
    – user535733
    Nov 18 '18 at 19:05






  • 6




    James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
    – Dietrich Epp
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:10










  • @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
    – kingledion
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:14






  • 2




    I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
    – Prof. Falken
    Nov 19 '18 at 8:33



















10














Yes... and No



Could you import enough educated people via time travel into the 14th century to build an inline engine? Of course. The metal existed then. The oil and rubber existed then. In other words, there's nothing about the planet, itself, in the 14th century that wasn't also true in the 19th and 20th centuries. So, yes, if you bring enough expertise with you, you can do it.



But what would be the point?



Technology (aka, knowledge) is a pyramid of knowledge and experience, innovation and insight, and at every moment the pinnacle of that pyramid is based on the accumulation of everything beneath it. The amount of knowledge and experience that pinnacle represents is staggering.



The smaller the group of people you can import into the 14th century, the more likely the answer is "no." The dependencies involved with technology are deep and unforgiving. Henry Ford (et al) had access to trains, "modern" mining, factories and cities full of people who were competent to work in those factories, universities (the educational pyramid alone is massive), chemical plants, tool manufacturers, etc., etc....



So, unless you can import each and every person you need (potentially thousands), no, you can't build an inline motor in the 14th century.



Besides, if if you import everyone you need, you wouldn't have the medieval period anymore. It would instantly (within 5 years) be changed to the industrial age. If history has proven anything, it's that keeping knowledge a secret is basically impossible.



P.S., if what you're trying to do is reinvent Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurther's Court, you should be aware that as you add detail, the story will become less believable. The story is only plausible when you force the tech to exist within the context of the culture, which means you can't have your engine and a believable story. I could be wrong guessing about your motivations, though.





Edit: A response to a comment made by @Graham brought this succinct point: Assuming you have no limitations to your time travel, you can always import enough people in the right order to guarantee construction of the engine — but that makes the timeline and the culture associated with the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline, the less possible that engine becomes (likely at an exponentially decreasing rate).






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  • 1




    You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:06








  • 2




    @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
    – JBH
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:19










  • Nice extra point - I like it
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:51



















1














I think a hot-bulb two-stroke engine might just be possible. It has no valves, so no need for springs. Instead, it uses the reciprocation of the piston, quote Wikipedia "by the piston covering and uncovering ports in the cylinder wall". Since you still need somewhat high precision, you probably need to produce a working mechanical workshop. Set up shop by a river where you can use flowing water to power your lathe, which you will build from scratch and use to build a better lathe, which you will use to produce your engine.



Since you do not have access to much steel, if any, you need to work with cast iron. So this engine will be heavy and not suitable for airplanes, but for carriages, boats or a (possibly portable) power plant it would be fine.



Since hot-bulb engines run on crude oil, you don't need a petrochemical industry. Hot-bulb engines were usually started with lighter oils or gasoline/petrol, but you could likely distill smaller amounts of "starter fluid" from crude oil or maybe use ethanol. Or just heat the bulb with an external fire until the bulb is hot enough. Once the engine is hot, you can pour in olive oil, bees wax, crude oil, whatever flows and burns, tar oil. These engines are not picky, if it flows and burns it will run on it.



A hot-bulb engine also avoids spark plugs while avoiding the high compression ratio of the Diesel engine, avoiding the need for the high tolerance necessary for Diesel engines.



Regarding measuring, just produce your own reference measuring bits. They don't have to conform to anything in particular, the important thing is that they are internally consistent and that you store your reference bits safely, and only work with copies made from those. Choose metric, imperial, or invent your own system. :)



Since using bolts is another technology which is actually very advanced, use riveting whenever at all possible.



Edit:
In fact, you may want to bootstrap your engine factory by first producing engines for stationary power plants, so you can build more robust, lower precision engines first. Now, mills and pumps for wells etc can be powered by your invention where there was no power source before.



These engines also run on wood gas, and wood you should be able to find without a petrochemical industry. :-)






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    1














    Valveless pulsejet is definitely fit for aircraft and you could call it internal combustion one(fuel combusts inside after all).



    You do not need high quality metal - ordinary construction steel was used for those and I am pretty sure bronze would work too.



    Any plant oil would go as fuel - it was even fed coal dust!



    Basically no precision is required - enthusiast just cut steel by hand when make one.



    No need for spark plug - fire from previous cycle ignites fuel.



    No need for fuel pump - you can use valve to pressurize fuel tank with exhaust from engine.






    share|improve this answer





















    • If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 20 '18 at 12:16












    • Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 20 '18 at 12:22






    • 1




      @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
      – Vashu
      Nov 21 '18 at 1:25






    • 1




      @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
      – Vashu
      Nov 21 '18 at 1:30



















    0














    They could if you teach them how to make materials and all needed tools and parts of said engines and vehicles. And have funds and influence to get it going.



    But that would take years to get there.



    Tools that do not need energy??? Maybe they have internal power supply? Tools that use your muscles for energy source?






    share|improve this answer























    • The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
      – L.Dutch
      Nov 19 '18 at 10:05










    • It is about time-travaler's tools :)
      – Artemijs Danilovs
      Nov 19 '18 at 15:15











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    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes








    5 Answers
    5






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

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    active

    oldest

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    13














    There are too many missing technologies



    There are several technologies critical to an inline engine that would not have been easily replicated in the 14th century of thereabouts




    • High quality metal. The block (and cylinders and cylinder heads and bolts, etc) are under high temperature and pressure stress during operation. Metals at the time might not have been able to handle the stress; at least, given the uneven quality of production, not all engines would work. You'd need to wait at least until the development of mass produced iron cannons in the 17th century, possibly until the steel-making changes of the First Industrial Revolution around 1800.


    • Fuel. The technology to refine crude oil into a useful gasoline by product didn't really exist. Neither does a suitable lubrication oil You would have to get an entire petrochemical industry off the ground by yourself.


    • You can't make the parts. The crankshaft (along with a cam) is necessary to control the timing of the pistons. That wasn't used widespread in Europe until the 15thc century. Valves and valve springs haven't been invented either. Pistons for compression weren't invented until 1838. Neither have the machine tools to make such finely tuned internal parts. Topping this all off, there does not exist a standard set of measurements which you could use to have craftsmen build parts of standardized sizes.


    • You need a spark plug. Which means you need to develop the technologies for integrating ceramic and metal into what is basically a capacitor. Also, you need a battery or at least an alternator to run the spark plug. Alternately, you can use compression ignition, but that just makes your metals problems in bullet point 1 that much worse.



    You basically need...like....an Industrial Revolution to build an internal combustion engine. So, you can do it in the 14th century, as long as you have a ~1900 industrial base....but then you aren't really in the 14th century any more.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
      – AlexP
      Nov 18 '18 at 18:31










    • ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
      – user535733
      Nov 18 '18 at 19:05






    • 6




      James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
      – Dietrich Epp
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:10










    • @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
      – kingledion
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:14






    • 2




      I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 19 '18 at 8:33
















    13














    There are too many missing technologies



    There are several technologies critical to an inline engine that would not have been easily replicated in the 14th century of thereabouts




    • High quality metal. The block (and cylinders and cylinder heads and bolts, etc) are under high temperature and pressure stress during operation. Metals at the time might not have been able to handle the stress; at least, given the uneven quality of production, not all engines would work. You'd need to wait at least until the development of mass produced iron cannons in the 17th century, possibly until the steel-making changes of the First Industrial Revolution around 1800.


    • Fuel. The technology to refine crude oil into a useful gasoline by product didn't really exist. Neither does a suitable lubrication oil You would have to get an entire petrochemical industry off the ground by yourself.


    • You can't make the parts. The crankshaft (along with a cam) is necessary to control the timing of the pistons. That wasn't used widespread in Europe until the 15thc century. Valves and valve springs haven't been invented either. Pistons for compression weren't invented until 1838. Neither have the machine tools to make such finely tuned internal parts. Topping this all off, there does not exist a standard set of measurements which you could use to have craftsmen build parts of standardized sizes.


    • You need a spark plug. Which means you need to develop the technologies for integrating ceramic and metal into what is basically a capacitor. Also, you need a battery or at least an alternator to run the spark plug. Alternately, you can use compression ignition, but that just makes your metals problems in bullet point 1 that much worse.



    You basically need...like....an Industrial Revolution to build an internal combustion engine. So, you can do it in the 14th century, as long as you have a ~1900 industrial base....but then you aren't really in the 14th century any more.






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
      – AlexP
      Nov 18 '18 at 18:31










    • ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
      – user535733
      Nov 18 '18 at 19:05






    • 6




      James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
      – Dietrich Epp
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:10










    • @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
      – kingledion
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:14






    • 2




      I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 19 '18 at 8:33














    13












    13








    13






    There are too many missing technologies



    There are several technologies critical to an inline engine that would not have been easily replicated in the 14th century of thereabouts




    • High quality metal. The block (and cylinders and cylinder heads and bolts, etc) are under high temperature and pressure stress during operation. Metals at the time might not have been able to handle the stress; at least, given the uneven quality of production, not all engines would work. You'd need to wait at least until the development of mass produced iron cannons in the 17th century, possibly until the steel-making changes of the First Industrial Revolution around 1800.


    • Fuel. The technology to refine crude oil into a useful gasoline by product didn't really exist. Neither does a suitable lubrication oil You would have to get an entire petrochemical industry off the ground by yourself.


    • You can't make the parts. The crankshaft (along with a cam) is necessary to control the timing of the pistons. That wasn't used widespread in Europe until the 15thc century. Valves and valve springs haven't been invented either. Pistons for compression weren't invented until 1838. Neither have the machine tools to make such finely tuned internal parts. Topping this all off, there does not exist a standard set of measurements which you could use to have craftsmen build parts of standardized sizes.


    • You need a spark plug. Which means you need to develop the technologies for integrating ceramic and metal into what is basically a capacitor. Also, you need a battery or at least an alternator to run the spark plug. Alternately, you can use compression ignition, but that just makes your metals problems in bullet point 1 that much worse.



    You basically need...like....an Industrial Revolution to build an internal combustion engine. So, you can do it in the 14th century, as long as you have a ~1900 industrial base....but then you aren't really in the 14th century any more.






    share|improve this answer














    There are too many missing technologies



    There are several technologies critical to an inline engine that would not have been easily replicated in the 14th century of thereabouts




    • High quality metal. The block (and cylinders and cylinder heads and bolts, etc) are under high temperature and pressure stress during operation. Metals at the time might not have been able to handle the stress; at least, given the uneven quality of production, not all engines would work. You'd need to wait at least until the development of mass produced iron cannons in the 17th century, possibly until the steel-making changes of the First Industrial Revolution around 1800.


    • Fuel. The technology to refine crude oil into a useful gasoline by product didn't really exist. Neither does a suitable lubrication oil You would have to get an entire petrochemical industry off the ground by yourself.


    • You can't make the parts. The crankshaft (along with a cam) is necessary to control the timing of the pistons. That wasn't used widespread in Europe until the 15thc century. Valves and valve springs haven't been invented either. Pistons for compression weren't invented until 1838. Neither have the machine tools to make such finely tuned internal parts. Topping this all off, there does not exist a standard set of measurements which you could use to have craftsmen build parts of standardized sizes.


    • You need a spark plug. Which means you need to develop the technologies for integrating ceramic and metal into what is basically a capacitor. Also, you need a battery or at least an alternator to run the spark plug. Alternately, you can use compression ignition, but that just makes your metals problems in bullet point 1 that much worse.



    You basically need...like....an Industrial Revolution to build an internal combustion engine. So, you can do it in the 14th century, as long as you have a ~1900 industrial base....but then you aren't really in the 14th century any more.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 18 '18 at 18:35

























    answered Nov 18 '18 at 17:37









    kingledionkingledion

    72.9k26244431




    72.9k26244431








    • 1




      Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
      – AlexP
      Nov 18 '18 at 18:31










    • ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
      – user535733
      Nov 18 '18 at 19:05






    • 6




      James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
      – Dietrich Epp
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:10










    • @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
      – kingledion
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:14






    • 2




      I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 19 '18 at 8:33














    • 1




      Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
      – AlexP
      Nov 18 '18 at 18:31










    • ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
      – user535733
      Nov 18 '18 at 19:05






    • 6




      James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
      – Dietrich Epp
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:10










    • @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
      – kingledion
      Nov 19 '18 at 4:14






    • 2




      I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
      – Prof. Falken
      Nov 19 '18 at 8:33








    1




    1




    Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:31




    Cams were known since the Hellenistic period. Gasoline and spark plugs are not needed for Diesel engines; a crude form of kerosene was available in the Middle Ages (in the right places, mostly Arabic-speaking). But you are right that steel is a killer; and the biggest problem is that in the Middle Ages they didn't even a means of communicating the dimensions of the pieces with anything resembling the required accuracy.
    – AlexP
    Nov 18 '18 at 18:31












    ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
    – user535733
    Nov 18 '18 at 19:05




    ...and roads for the vehicles, and telegraphy so weather observers can file reports for safe flying, and banking because all those far-flung infrastructure and chemical and mechanical employees won't work for free.
    – user535733
    Nov 18 '18 at 19:05




    6




    6




    James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
    – Dietrich Epp
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:10




    James Watt reportedly had great difficulty creating a larger piston that did not leak gasses, and many attempts had gaps more than 3/8". John Smeaton, the “father of civil engineering,” said in 1769 that “neither the tools nor the workmen existed that could manufacture so complex a machine with sufficient precision.” It was only in 1774 that John Wilkinson invented a boring machine which would make manufacturing the steam engine possible. “We hardly realize the crudity of tools available in the eighteenth century…” from English and American Tool Builders, by Joseph Wickham Roe, p. 3.
    – Dietrich Epp
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:10












    @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
    – kingledion
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:14




    @DietrichEpp Great find, that pretty much answers the question right there. If Great Inventors (TM) couldn't bore the correct hole in the 1760s, what chance did the medievals have?
    – kingledion
    Nov 19 '18 at 4:14




    2




    2




    I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
    – Prof. Falken
    Nov 19 '18 at 8:33




    I read somewhere a blog of a guy who bootstrapped a mechanical workshop in his backyard from a furnace, melting metal, and so on with more and more refined machinery until he had a lathe and milling machine which he used to create a higher precision lathe and milling machine.
    – Prof. Falken
    Nov 19 '18 at 8:33











    10














    Yes... and No



    Could you import enough educated people via time travel into the 14th century to build an inline engine? Of course. The metal existed then. The oil and rubber existed then. In other words, there's nothing about the planet, itself, in the 14th century that wasn't also true in the 19th and 20th centuries. So, yes, if you bring enough expertise with you, you can do it.



    But what would be the point?



    Technology (aka, knowledge) is a pyramid of knowledge and experience, innovation and insight, and at every moment the pinnacle of that pyramid is based on the accumulation of everything beneath it. The amount of knowledge and experience that pinnacle represents is staggering.



    The smaller the group of people you can import into the 14th century, the more likely the answer is "no." The dependencies involved with technology are deep and unforgiving. Henry Ford (et al) had access to trains, "modern" mining, factories and cities full of people who were competent to work in those factories, universities (the educational pyramid alone is massive), chemical plants, tool manufacturers, etc., etc....



    So, unless you can import each and every person you need (potentially thousands), no, you can't build an inline motor in the 14th century.



    Besides, if if you import everyone you need, you wouldn't have the medieval period anymore. It would instantly (within 5 years) be changed to the industrial age. If history has proven anything, it's that keeping knowledge a secret is basically impossible.



    P.S., if what you're trying to do is reinvent Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurther's Court, you should be aware that as you add detail, the story will become less believable. The story is only plausible when you force the tech to exist within the context of the culture, which means you can't have your engine and a believable story. I could be wrong guessing about your motivations, though.





    Edit: A response to a comment made by @Graham brought this succinct point: Assuming you have no limitations to your time travel, you can always import enough people in the right order to guarantee construction of the engine — but that makes the timeline and the culture associated with the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline, the less possible that engine becomes (likely at an exponentially decreasing rate).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:06








    • 2




      @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
      – JBH
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:19










    • Nice extra point - I like it
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:51
















    10














    Yes... and No



    Could you import enough educated people via time travel into the 14th century to build an inline engine? Of course. The metal existed then. The oil and rubber existed then. In other words, there's nothing about the planet, itself, in the 14th century that wasn't also true in the 19th and 20th centuries. So, yes, if you bring enough expertise with you, you can do it.



    But what would be the point?



    Technology (aka, knowledge) is a pyramid of knowledge and experience, innovation and insight, and at every moment the pinnacle of that pyramid is based on the accumulation of everything beneath it. The amount of knowledge and experience that pinnacle represents is staggering.



    The smaller the group of people you can import into the 14th century, the more likely the answer is "no." The dependencies involved with technology are deep and unforgiving. Henry Ford (et al) had access to trains, "modern" mining, factories and cities full of people who were competent to work in those factories, universities (the educational pyramid alone is massive), chemical plants, tool manufacturers, etc., etc....



    So, unless you can import each and every person you need (potentially thousands), no, you can't build an inline motor in the 14th century.



    Besides, if if you import everyone you need, you wouldn't have the medieval period anymore. It would instantly (within 5 years) be changed to the industrial age. If history has proven anything, it's that keeping knowledge a secret is basically impossible.



    P.S., if what you're trying to do is reinvent Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurther's Court, you should be aware that as you add detail, the story will become less believable. The story is only plausible when you force the tech to exist within the context of the culture, which means you can't have your engine and a believable story. I could be wrong guessing about your motivations, though.





    Edit: A response to a comment made by @Graham brought this succinct point: Assuming you have no limitations to your time travel, you can always import enough people in the right order to guarantee construction of the engine — but that makes the timeline and the culture associated with the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline, the less possible that engine becomes (likely at an exponentially decreasing rate).






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:06








    • 2




      @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
      – JBH
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:19










    • Nice extra point - I like it
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:51














    10












    10








    10






    Yes... and No



    Could you import enough educated people via time travel into the 14th century to build an inline engine? Of course. The metal existed then. The oil and rubber existed then. In other words, there's nothing about the planet, itself, in the 14th century that wasn't also true in the 19th and 20th centuries. So, yes, if you bring enough expertise with you, you can do it.



    But what would be the point?



    Technology (aka, knowledge) is a pyramid of knowledge and experience, innovation and insight, and at every moment the pinnacle of that pyramid is based on the accumulation of everything beneath it. The amount of knowledge and experience that pinnacle represents is staggering.



    The smaller the group of people you can import into the 14th century, the more likely the answer is "no." The dependencies involved with technology are deep and unforgiving. Henry Ford (et al) had access to trains, "modern" mining, factories and cities full of people who were competent to work in those factories, universities (the educational pyramid alone is massive), chemical plants, tool manufacturers, etc., etc....



    So, unless you can import each and every person you need (potentially thousands), no, you can't build an inline motor in the 14th century.



    Besides, if if you import everyone you need, you wouldn't have the medieval period anymore. It would instantly (within 5 years) be changed to the industrial age. If history has proven anything, it's that keeping knowledge a secret is basically impossible.



    P.S., if what you're trying to do is reinvent Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurther's Court, you should be aware that as you add detail, the story will become less believable. The story is only plausible when you force the tech to exist within the context of the culture, which means you can't have your engine and a believable story. I could be wrong guessing about your motivations, though.





    Edit: A response to a comment made by @Graham brought this succinct point: Assuming you have no limitations to your time travel, you can always import enough people in the right order to guarantee construction of the engine — but that makes the timeline and the culture associated with the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline, the less possible that engine becomes (likely at an exponentially decreasing rate).






    share|improve this answer














    Yes... and No



    Could you import enough educated people via time travel into the 14th century to build an inline engine? Of course. The metal existed then. The oil and rubber existed then. In other words, there's nothing about the planet, itself, in the 14th century that wasn't also true in the 19th and 20th centuries. So, yes, if you bring enough expertise with you, you can do it.



    But what would be the point?



    Technology (aka, knowledge) is a pyramid of knowledge and experience, innovation and insight, and at every moment the pinnacle of that pyramid is based on the accumulation of everything beneath it. The amount of knowledge and experience that pinnacle represents is staggering.



    The smaller the group of people you can import into the 14th century, the more likely the answer is "no." The dependencies involved with technology are deep and unforgiving. Henry Ford (et al) had access to trains, "modern" mining, factories and cities full of people who were competent to work in those factories, universities (the educational pyramid alone is massive), chemical plants, tool manufacturers, etc., etc....



    So, unless you can import each and every person you need (potentially thousands), no, you can't build an inline motor in the 14th century.



    Besides, if if you import everyone you need, you wouldn't have the medieval period anymore. It would instantly (within 5 years) be changed to the industrial age. If history has proven anything, it's that keeping knowledge a secret is basically impossible.



    P.S., if what you're trying to do is reinvent Twain's A Connecticut Yankee in King Aurther's Court, you should be aware that as you add detail, the story will become less believable. The story is only plausible when you force the tech to exist within the context of the culture, which means you can't have your engine and a believable story. I could be wrong guessing about your motivations, though.





    Edit: A response to a comment made by @Graham brought this succinct point: Assuming you have no limitations to your time travel, you can always import enough people in the right order to guarantee construction of the engine — but that makes the timeline and the culture associated with the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline, the less possible that engine becomes (likely at an exponentially decreasing rate).







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 18 '18 at 23:22

























    answered Nov 18 '18 at 16:42









    JBHJBH

    40.8k590195




    40.8k590195








    • 1




      You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:06








    • 2




      @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
      – JBH
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:19










    • Nice extra point - I like it
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:51














    • 1




      You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:06








    • 2




      @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
      – JBH
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:19










    • Nice extra point - I like it
      – Graham
      Nov 18 '18 at 23:51








    1




    1




    You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:06






    You're still too optimistic though. :) The elemental metal existed, and the oil was still in the ground, sure. The technology to make decent steel did not exist though, and nor did the fractional-distillation techniques required for refining crude oil, and nor did the technology to extract crude oil. Even importing the people, you would need the entire supply chain, from miners and oil workers onwards.. Nothingthis is remotely possible.
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:06






    2




    2




    @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
    – JBH
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:19




    @Graham, hence the "no" half of my answer. If you imported about 250,000 specialists, each in turn, over a multi-year period, you could build the engine (just the effort of developing 1910-level milling would be a pain) - but that's an action that's 100% disconnected from the culture of the time, making the assertion of the timeline irrelevant. The more relevant the timeline or culture of the timeline, the less possible this becomes. I like how that came out. I'm going to add it to my answer. Cheers!
    – JBH
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:19












    Nice extra point - I like it
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:51




    Nice extra point - I like it
    – Graham
    Nov 18 '18 at 23:51











    1














    I think a hot-bulb two-stroke engine might just be possible. It has no valves, so no need for springs. Instead, it uses the reciprocation of the piston, quote Wikipedia "by the piston covering and uncovering ports in the cylinder wall". Since you still need somewhat high precision, you probably need to produce a working mechanical workshop. Set up shop by a river where you can use flowing water to power your lathe, which you will build from scratch and use to build a better lathe, which you will use to produce your engine.



    Since you do not have access to much steel, if any, you need to work with cast iron. So this engine will be heavy and not suitable for airplanes, but for carriages, boats or a (possibly portable) power plant it would be fine.



    Since hot-bulb engines run on crude oil, you don't need a petrochemical industry. Hot-bulb engines were usually started with lighter oils or gasoline/petrol, but you could likely distill smaller amounts of "starter fluid" from crude oil or maybe use ethanol. Or just heat the bulb with an external fire until the bulb is hot enough. Once the engine is hot, you can pour in olive oil, bees wax, crude oil, whatever flows and burns, tar oil. These engines are not picky, if it flows and burns it will run on it.



    A hot-bulb engine also avoids spark plugs while avoiding the high compression ratio of the Diesel engine, avoiding the need for the high tolerance necessary for Diesel engines.



    Regarding measuring, just produce your own reference measuring bits. They don't have to conform to anything in particular, the important thing is that they are internally consistent and that you store your reference bits safely, and only work with copies made from those. Choose metric, imperial, or invent your own system. :)



    Since using bolts is another technology which is actually very advanced, use riveting whenever at all possible.



    Edit:
    In fact, you may want to bootstrap your engine factory by first producing engines for stationary power plants, so you can build more robust, lower precision engines first. Now, mills and pumps for wells etc can be powered by your invention where there was no power source before.



    These engines also run on wood gas, and wood you should be able to find without a petrochemical industry. :-)






    share|improve this answer




























      1














      I think a hot-bulb two-stroke engine might just be possible. It has no valves, so no need for springs. Instead, it uses the reciprocation of the piston, quote Wikipedia "by the piston covering and uncovering ports in the cylinder wall". Since you still need somewhat high precision, you probably need to produce a working mechanical workshop. Set up shop by a river where you can use flowing water to power your lathe, which you will build from scratch and use to build a better lathe, which you will use to produce your engine.



      Since you do not have access to much steel, if any, you need to work with cast iron. So this engine will be heavy and not suitable for airplanes, but for carriages, boats or a (possibly portable) power plant it would be fine.



      Since hot-bulb engines run on crude oil, you don't need a petrochemical industry. Hot-bulb engines were usually started with lighter oils or gasoline/petrol, but you could likely distill smaller amounts of "starter fluid" from crude oil or maybe use ethanol. Or just heat the bulb with an external fire until the bulb is hot enough. Once the engine is hot, you can pour in olive oil, bees wax, crude oil, whatever flows and burns, tar oil. These engines are not picky, if it flows and burns it will run on it.



      A hot-bulb engine also avoids spark plugs while avoiding the high compression ratio of the Diesel engine, avoiding the need for the high tolerance necessary for Diesel engines.



      Regarding measuring, just produce your own reference measuring bits. They don't have to conform to anything in particular, the important thing is that they are internally consistent and that you store your reference bits safely, and only work with copies made from those. Choose metric, imperial, or invent your own system. :)



      Since using bolts is another technology which is actually very advanced, use riveting whenever at all possible.



      Edit:
      In fact, you may want to bootstrap your engine factory by first producing engines for stationary power plants, so you can build more robust, lower precision engines first. Now, mills and pumps for wells etc can be powered by your invention where there was no power source before.



      These engines also run on wood gas, and wood you should be able to find without a petrochemical industry. :-)






      share|improve this answer


























        1












        1








        1






        I think a hot-bulb two-stroke engine might just be possible. It has no valves, so no need for springs. Instead, it uses the reciprocation of the piston, quote Wikipedia "by the piston covering and uncovering ports in the cylinder wall". Since you still need somewhat high precision, you probably need to produce a working mechanical workshop. Set up shop by a river where you can use flowing water to power your lathe, which you will build from scratch and use to build a better lathe, which you will use to produce your engine.



        Since you do not have access to much steel, if any, you need to work with cast iron. So this engine will be heavy and not suitable for airplanes, but for carriages, boats or a (possibly portable) power plant it would be fine.



        Since hot-bulb engines run on crude oil, you don't need a petrochemical industry. Hot-bulb engines were usually started with lighter oils or gasoline/petrol, but you could likely distill smaller amounts of "starter fluid" from crude oil or maybe use ethanol. Or just heat the bulb with an external fire until the bulb is hot enough. Once the engine is hot, you can pour in olive oil, bees wax, crude oil, whatever flows and burns, tar oil. These engines are not picky, if it flows and burns it will run on it.



        A hot-bulb engine also avoids spark plugs while avoiding the high compression ratio of the Diesel engine, avoiding the need for the high tolerance necessary for Diesel engines.



        Regarding measuring, just produce your own reference measuring bits. They don't have to conform to anything in particular, the important thing is that they are internally consistent and that you store your reference bits safely, and only work with copies made from those. Choose metric, imperial, or invent your own system. :)



        Since using bolts is another technology which is actually very advanced, use riveting whenever at all possible.



        Edit:
        In fact, you may want to bootstrap your engine factory by first producing engines for stationary power plants, so you can build more robust, lower precision engines first. Now, mills and pumps for wells etc can be powered by your invention where there was no power source before.



        These engines also run on wood gas, and wood you should be able to find without a petrochemical industry. :-)






        share|improve this answer














        I think a hot-bulb two-stroke engine might just be possible. It has no valves, so no need for springs. Instead, it uses the reciprocation of the piston, quote Wikipedia "by the piston covering and uncovering ports in the cylinder wall". Since you still need somewhat high precision, you probably need to produce a working mechanical workshop. Set up shop by a river where you can use flowing water to power your lathe, which you will build from scratch and use to build a better lathe, which you will use to produce your engine.



        Since you do not have access to much steel, if any, you need to work with cast iron. So this engine will be heavy and not suitable for airplanes, but for carriages, boats or a (possibly portable) power plant it would be fine.



        Since hot-bulb engines run on crude oil, you don't need a petrochemical industry. Hot-bulb engines were usually started with lighter oils or gasoline/petrol, but you could likely distill smaller amounts of "starter fluid" from crude oil or maybe use ethanol. Or just heat the bulb with an external fire until the bulb is hot enough. Once the engine is hot, you can pour in olive oil, bees wax, crude oil, whatever flows and burns, tar oil. These engines are not picky, if it flows and burns it will run on it.



        A hot-bulb engine also avoids spark plugs while avoiding the high compression ratio of the Diesel engine, avoiding the need for the high tolerance necessary for Diesel engines.



        Regarding measuring, just produce your own reference measuring bits. They don't have to conform to anything in particular, the important thing is that they are internally consistent and that you store your reference bits safely, and only work with copies made from those. Choose metric, imperial, or invent your own system. :)



        Since using bolts is another technology which is actually very advanced, use riveting whenever at all possible.



        Edit:
        In fact, you may want to bootstrap your engine factory by first producing engines for stationary power plants, so you can build more robust, lower precision engines first. Now, mills and pumps for wells etc can be powered by your invention where there was no power source before.



        These engines also run on wood gas, and wood you should be able to find without a petrochemical industry. :-)







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Nov 19 '18 at 9:23

























        answered Nov 19 '18 at 8:57









        Prof. FalkenProf. Falken

        1335




        1335























            1














            Valveless pulsejet is definitely fit for aircraft and you could call it internal combustion one(fuel combusts inside after all).



            You do not need high quality metal - ordinary construction steel was used for those and I am pretty sure bronze would work too.



            Any plant oil would go as fuel - it was even fed coal dust!



            Basically no precision is required - enthusiast just cut steel by hand when make one.



            No need for spark plug - fire from previous cycle ignites fuel.



            No need for fuel pump - you can use valve to pressurize fuel tank with exhaust from engine.






            share|improve this answer





















            • If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:16












            • Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:22






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:25






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:30
















            1














            Valveless pulsejet is definitely fit for aircraft and you could call it internal combustion one(fuel combusts inside after all).



            You do not need high quality metal - ordinary construction steel was used for those and I am pretty sure bronze would work too.



            Any plant oil would go as fuel - it was even fed coal dust!



            Basically no precision is required - enthusiast just cut steel by hand when make one.



            No need for spark plug - fire from previous cycle ignites fuel.



            No need for fuel pump - you can use valve to pressurize fuel tank with exhaust from engine.






            share|improve this answer





















            • If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:16












            • Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:22






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:25






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:30














            1












            1








            1






            Valveless pulsejet is definitely fit for aircraft and you could call it internal combustion one(fuel combusts inside after all).



            You do not need high quality metal - ordinary construction steel was used for those and I am pretty sure bronze would work too.



            Any plant oil would go as fuel - it was even fed coal dust!



            Basically no precision is required - enthusiast just cut steel by hand when make one.



            No need for spark plug - fire from previous cycle ignites fuel.



            No need for fuel pump - you can use valve to pressurize fuel tank with exhaust from engine.






            share|improve this answer












            Valveless pulsejet is definitely fit for aircraft and you could call it internal combustion one(fuel combusts inside after all).



            You do not need high quality metal - ordinary construction steel was used for those and I am pretty sure bronze would work too.



            Any plant oil would go as fuel - it was even fed coal dust!



            Basically no precision is required - enthusiast just cut steel by hand when make one.



            No need for spark plug - fire from previous cycle ignites fuel.



            No need for fuel pump - you can use valve to pressurize fuel tank with exhaust from engine.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 20 '18 at 4:15









            VashuVashu

            2,643414




            2,643414












            • If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:16












            • Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:22






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:25






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:30


















            • If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:16












            • Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
              – Prof. Falken
              Nov 20 '18 at 12:22






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:25






            • 1




              @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
              – Vashu
              Nov 21 '18 at 1:30
















            If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
            – Prof. Falken
            Nov 20 '18 at 12:16






            If the fuel pressure valve is simple enough, I'm sold on this idea. How would the valve work?
            – Prof. Falken
            Nov 20 '18 at 12:16














            Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
            – Prof. Falken
            Nov 20 '18 at 12:22




            Also I read here aardvark.co.nz/pjet/jet_efficiency1.shtml that a pulsejet uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine. Could still be worth it for aircraft I guess, if the bronze could be make thin and strong enough.
            – Prof. Falken
            Nov 20 '18 at 12:22




            1




            1




            @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
            – Vashu
            Nov 21 '18 at 1:25




            @Prof.Falken // How would the valve work? Peak overpressure during engine work is about 1 atm. There is small valve that lets air in tank when pressure is high. So you would get 1 atm overpressure in tank - that's all. If you need something lower - you put safety valve that lets air out is pressure is above set limit. Now that tank is pressurized you do not need pump - you just let fuel out.
            – Vashu
            Nov 21 '18 at 1:25




            1




            1




            @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
            – Vashu
            Nov 21 '18 at 1:30




            @Prof.Falken // uses some like 20 times more fuel than a piston engine Yes, efficiency is very low. You can get specific impulse about 700 ( aardvark.co.nz/pjet/mylockwood.shtml ) so, say we have a 1 ton plane with 250 kg of fuel and lift-to-drag ratio 10. Then if it flies 180-360 km/h(the faster it is - the more efficient it is) it can fly about 90-180 km. Piston engine would easily beat 1000 km.
            – Vashu
            Nov 21 '18 at 1:30











            0














            They could if you teach them how to make materials and all needed tools and parts of said engines and vehicles. And have funds and influence to get it going.



            But that would take years to get there.



            Tools that do not need energy??? Maybe they have internal power supply? Tools that use your muscles for energy source?






            share|improve this answer























            • The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
              – L.Dutch
              Nov 19 '18 at 10:05










            • It is about time-travaler's tools :)
              – Artemijs Danilovs
              Nov 19 '18 at 15:15
















            0














            They could if you teach them how to make materials and all needed tools and parts of said engines and vehicles. And have funds and influence to get it going.



            But that would take years to get there.



            Tools that do not need energy??? Maybe they have internal power supply? Tools that use your muscles for energy source?






            share|improve this answer























            • The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
              – L.Dutch
              Nov 19 '18 at 10:05










            • It is about time-travaler's tools :)
              – Artemijs Danilovs
              Nov 19 '18 at 15:15














            0












            0








            0






            They could if you teach them how to make materials and all needed tools and parts of said engines and vehicles. And have funds and influence to get it going.



            But that would take years to get there.



            Tools that do not need energy??? Maybe they have internal power supply? Tools that use your muscles for energy source?






            share|improve this answer














            They could if you teach them how to make materials and all needed tools and parts of said engines and vehicles. And have funds and influence to get it going.



            But that would take years to get there.



            Tools that do not need energy??? Maybe they have internal power supply? Tools that use your muscles for energy source?







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Nov 18 '18 at 18:31

























            answered Nov 18 '18 at 18:09









            Artemijs DanilovsArtemijs Danilovs

            1,704113




            1,704113












            • The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
              – L.Dutch
              Nov 19 '18 at 10:05










            • It is about time-travaler's tools :)
              – Artemijs Danilovs
              Nov 19 '18 at 15:15


















            • The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
              – L.Dutch
              Nov 19 '18 at 10:05










            • It is about time-travaler's tools :)
              – Artemijs Danilovs
              Nov 19 '18 at 15:15
















            The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
            – L.Dutch
            Nov 19 '18 at 10:05




            The only internal power supply tools in 14th century were livestock...
            – L.Dutch
            Nov 19 '18 at 10:05












            It is about time-travaler's tools :)
            – Artemijs Danilovs
            Nov 19 '18 at 15:15




            It is about time-travaler's tools :)
            – Artemijs Danilovs
            Nov 19 '18 at 15:15


















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