dhfan wrote:
I'm not sure how you can say horizontally opposed engines would have the same problem. The majority of any excess oil would drain into the crankcase, with an inverted engine the only place it can go is to/through the rings.
The excess oil in an inverted engine is collected in troughs in the crankcase, where it is either routed to the valve gear, rocker cover and through the scavenge pump to the tank, or directly to the scavenge pump to the tank.
If the splash from the crank did collect significantly more on one side of the engine in a way that would affect the compression ratio, then it would also happen in horizontally opposed engines, or upright V's, or even W's no matter how the oil ultimately drained out. For that matter, it would mean that radial engines should have varying CR's from top to bottom, which is a design feature I've certainly never heard of.
Like a radial, more oil may drain through the rings at rest than an upright V engine, but if enough oil is getting through them while running to affect the compression ratio, then you would have serious problems no matter what configuration the engine is in.