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After all, a BWM airhead or other flat twin has an even firing order. But the crankshaft is asked to come to a dead stop when the two cylinder simultaneously arrive at top dead center, and then again when they are both at bottom dead center.At least the Guzzi's crank is never asked to come to a dead stop, although it is certainly slowed down in compressing the next cylinder charge.
I'm not describing my question well.I realize that any piston must stop at the top of its stroke and again at the bottom of its stroke. But on the V twin Guzzi engine, when one cylinder is "stopped" at the top (or bottom) of its stoke, the other piston is in mid-stroke. So one piston is at minimum velocity/energy (stopped), while the other is at max velocity/energy (mid-stroke). The Guzzis pistons just "swap" the energy back and forth.A flat twin, like a BMW airhead, has both pistons coming to a dead stop at the same time. That would seem to add more twisting force to the crank, even though the firing intervals are evenly spaced. Put a different way, on the BWM, when both pistons are stopped, the only way for the crank can keep rotating is to take some of the stored momentum out of the flywheel. The BWM thus "robs" the flywheel of the energy required to re-start two pistons from a dead stop. Whereas on the Guzzi, when one piston is stopped, the other is moving as its highest speed. Less "robbery" of the flywheel. In effect, on the Guzzi, one of the pistons, being in motion, is acting like a temporary flywheel.