Think about what R/S means for a second. Rod length / Stroke length. All it says is that ideally your rods are 1.75 times the length of you stroke. Now if you stop and consider why that ratio is so "good". The longer your rods are compared to you stroke the smaller the angles are between vertical and rod position as the pistons travels up and down. Envision a cross section of an inline reciprocating piston engine. As the piston starts to climb from BDC the rod forms an angle with vertical at the wrist pin. If you have taken any physics this is pretty basic. Think of a force diagram illustrating the forces acting on the wrist pin ( for simplicity sake assume that the piston and wristpin are one unit). The larger the angle between vertical and the rod, the larger the sine of that angle, and the larger the horizontal component of the force applied to the wrist pin (meaning more side loading on the piston and cylinder wall causing ovaling of the cylinders, increased piston wear, etc.).
1.75:1 is "perfect" because it is a good comprimise. The steeper rod angles make for more torque and longer rods put less pressure on the sidewalls. 1.75:1 is the optimization of these two factors (so you get the most torque with the least sidewall loading). Most engines run a an RS ratio of less than 1.75:1.
1.75:1 is "perfect" because it is a good comprimise. The steeper rod angles make for more torque and longer rods put less pressure on the sidewalls. 1.75:1 is the optimization of these two factors (so you get the most torque with the least sidewall loading). Most engines run a an RS ratio of less than 1.75:1.