Perhaps Greg was speaking of a aftermarket piston of sorts. If I am mistaken, I stand corrected.
With the rings, a keystone design, the pivoting action it does upon up and downward strokes is what I don't want to be truthful, IMO its just a design to make up for any ring-action that may unseat the ring from the ring land it has seated on due to pressure from just the simple movement or compression and combustion cylinder pressure.
Ring flutter is what just may come closer to happening in a keystone design would it not once a certain rpm has been passed?
Has the design of the Keystone evolved to be improved and compete more evenly than the square design? Top fuel engine producing more power/torque don't use barrel faced rings, do they?
With the rings, a keystone design, the pivoting action it does upon up and downward strokes is what I don't want to be truthful, IMO its just a design to make up for any ring-action that may unseat the ring from the ring land it has seated on due to pressure from just the simple movement or compression and combustion cylinder pressure.
Ring flutter is what just may come closer to happening in a keystone design would it not once a certain rpm has been passed?
Has the design of the Keystone evolved to be improved and compete more evenly than the square design? Top fuel engine producing more power/torque don't use barrel faced rings, do they?