Water is already the burnt product of hydrogen and oxygen. Adding water quenches the flame, and is used as a band aid in ridiculously overfueled engines to prevent meltdown, but the water never adds energy to the combustion. The steam does add pressure, but it takes combustion energy (fuel) to produce steam. All air already contains steam (relative humidity).
The steam may "steam clean" the oil film from the cylinder walls though.
Now, if there was a way to inject water to the underside, or inside of the piston, that would cool it a lot better than oil.
I think ceramic coated pistons would have survived this situation, and would not have dilated as much. If the scuffing was only caused by expansion, it would have been fine, but if it was caused by "steam cleaning" of the oil film, then some scuffing would still have occurred.
The steam may "steam clean" the oil film from the cylinder walls though.
Now, if there was a way to inject water to the underside, or inside of the piston, that would cool it a lot better than oil.
I think ceramic coated pistons would have survived this situation, and would not have dilated as much. If the scuffing was only caused by expansion, it would have been fine, but if it was caused by "steam cleaning" of the oil film, then some scuffing would still have occurred.
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