In general they do say you should have dissimilar metals. Its also a good idea in general to keep the piston as light as possible.
A lot of high performance 2 strokes use the ABC set up – an unringed ali piston running in a chromed brass liner. The chrome provides wear resistance, and the thermal expansion characteristics are such that you can machine in very little clearance. In fact so closely are they machined that they are often not made round but slightly oval – allows for differential expansion due to varying thickness of metal in the piston skirt so they expand to round.
On that basis I’d go for ali in brass for a low speed steam engine personally.If I couldn’t get that very tight clearance, I think I’d use a couple of Nitrile rings – once you go to rings, then the piston is just a carrier for those rings and the gudgeon pin. Since it won’t touch the bore, what its made of doesn’t matter, so long as it ticks the boxes about rigidity, length, lightness and not melting.
Mamod I think use brass in brass? for their oscillators.
Edited By meyrick griffith-jones on 21/11/2009 01:19:37