Now the momentum in the crankshaft starts
driving the piston back toward the
spark plug
for the compression stroke. As the
air/fuel mixture in the piston is compressed, a vacuum
is created in the crankcase. This vacuum opens
the reed valve and sucks air/fuel/oil in
from the carburetor.

Once the piston makes it to the end of the
compression stroke, the spark plug fires again
to repeat the cycle. It's called a two-stoke
engine because there is a compression stroke
and then a combustion stroke. In a
four-stroke engine, there are separate intake,
compression, combustion and exhaust
strokes.
You can see that the piston is really doing
three different things in a two-stroke
engine:

- On one side of the piston is the combustion
chamber, where the piston is compressing
the air/fuel mixture and capturing the
energy released by the ignition of the fuel.
- On the other side of the piston is the
crankcase,
where the piston is creating a vacuum to
suck in air/fuel from the carburetor through
the reed valve and then pressurizing the
crankcase so that air/fuel is forced into
the combustion chamber.
- Meanwhile, the sides of the piston are
acting like valves, covering and
uncovering the intake and exhaust ports
drilled into the side of the cylinder wall.
It's really pretty neat to see the piston doing
so many different things! That's what makes
two-stroke engines so simple and lightweight.
If you have ever used a two-stroke engine,
you know that you have to mix special two-stroke
oil in with the gasoline. Now that you
understand the two-stroke cycle you can see why.
In a four-stroke engine, the crankcase is
completely separate from the combustion chamber,
so you can fill the crankcase with heavy oil to
lubricate the crankshaft
bearings, the bearings
on either end of the piston's connecting rod and
the cylinder wall. In a
two-stroke
engine, on
the other hand, the crankcase is serving as a pressurization
chamber to force air/fuel into the cylinder,
so it can't hold a thick oil. Instead, you mix
oil in with the gas to lubricate the crankshaft,
connecting rod and cylinder walls. If you forget
to mix in the oil, the engine isn't going to
last very long.
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