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Can damage occur by running out of gas under heavy load?
It's hard to hole a 2-pot engine because of lean burning. They tend to die from leanness before the problem gets catastrophic. More cylinders = more 'help' cycling the lean piston through the number of strokes needed to melt it down.MOST of the holed/broken pistons I've seen on aircooled engines (and I've seen my share) have been from valve head launches (burned valve/two-piece valve braze failure) or oil failure at the rod little end. Next would come timing, and down the line is the wrong heat range spark plug. Somewhere below that are the few honestly melted crowns.
I didn't say it can't happen.
The shape of that piston, the high dome, looks exactly like a pair of 12:1 pistons I had in a '56 Triumph T110. This was in '72-'73. The only thing it would run on without pinging was Sunoco 260. (Yes, I had it timed correctly). When I tore it down, I took the pistons to a local Triumph shop and they told me they were the 12:1 compression ratio. If he ran it on 87 octane, I don't doubt he detonated and holed one of them. Just going by the picture and memory here. I'd like to know what fuel he was running.
It's a stock style 9-1 piston. The old style high compression Triumph pistons have a very peaked dome know to cause combustion problem ..9-1 compression Triumph will detonate on 87 octane...A careful rider with the engine tune up done properly can be ok 91 octane but 93 is best.... Sunoco 260 would be 98-99 octane by today's rating system. The forged 10.5 compression pistons in my 650 race Triumph look like this.. The 1930's hemi design requires a big dome for high compression..The left side piston shows an intake valve witness mark from running the engine beyond the cam design...
No. Because the engine stops working (producing heat) and while I expect it leans out as it runs out this wouldn't happen for long.
Detonation and preignition are two different things. Pre ignition is caused by things like timing, a hot spot in the chamber, overheated plugs etc. the mixture is lit off early. Detonation is when the mixture is lit off instantly and is caused by things like preigniton, temp, load, power setting, wrong fuel etc. detonation will destroy an engine before the operator realizes it is happening.