What makes it a hit and miss engine? Steam engines are sure interesting. Is this one coal powered? Can you imagine mass usage of mini nuke powered steam engines?
The steamers can run on anything burnable with enough caloric content, but they typically use coal because it has the most heat capacity.
A hit and miss engine is exactly what the name says. If it's not under load, the engine will fire once and the flywheel will keep the system moving until a certain RPM is reached, at which time the engine fires again. If the engine is under load, it will typically fire just like a modern engine. It was a design kind of made to be fuel conserving, but it was also an evolutionary step to more modern, efficient engines.
(post is archived)