Compression Ratio Calculator

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Calculate Compression Ratio

What is Compression Ratio?

Compression ratio is the ratio of the total cylinder volume (swept + clearance) to the clearance volume alone. It tells you how tightly the engine compresses the air-fuel mixture before ignition. Higher compression ratios produce more power but require higher octane fuel to prevent detonation (knock).

How to Measure Swept and Clearance Volume

Swept volume (also called displacement) is the volume the piston sweeps from bottom dead center (BDC) to top dead center (TDC). Clearance volume is the remaining space above the piston at TDC, including the combustion chamber. Use a burette and degree wheel for precise measurements on performance builds.

People Also Ask

What compression ratio is good for a small engine?

Most stock small engines run 6:1 to 8:1. Performance builds commonly target 10:1 to 13:1 depending on fuel type and intended use.

Can I run higher compression on pump gas?

Generally up to about 9.5:1 to 10.5:1 on 91-93 octane pump gas, depending on the engine design. Higher than that typically requires race fuel.

How does compression ratio affect power?

Higher compression increases thermal efficiency, which means more power from the same amount of fuel. Each additional point of compression adds roughly 3-4% more power.

What happens if compression ratio is too high?

The engine will detonate (knock), which can damage pistons, rings, and bearings very quickly. Always match your compression ratio to the fuel octane rating.

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