The main disadvantages of a sidevalve engine are poor gas flow, poor combustion chamber shape, and low compression ratio, all of which result in a low-revving engine with low power output and low efficiency. Because sidevalve engines do not burn the fuel efficiently, they suffer from high hydrocarbon emissions. Sidevalve engines can only be used for engines operating on the
Otto principle. The combustion chamber shape is unsuitable for
Diesel engines, which require a high
compression ratio for
ignition to occur. In a sidevalve engine, intake and exhaust gases follow a circuitous route, with low volumetric efficiency, or "poor breathing", not least because the exhaust gases interfere with the incoming charge. Because the exhaust follows a lengthy path to leave the engine, there is a tendency for the engine to
overheat. (Note: this is true for V-type flathead engines but less of an issue for inline engines which typically have the intake and exhaust ports on the same side of the engine block.) Although a sidevalve engine can safely operate at high speed, its
volumetric efficiency swiftly deteriorates, so that high power outputs are not feasible at speed. High volumetric efficiency was less important for early cars because their engines rarely sustained extended high speeds, but designers seeking higher power outputs had to abandon the sidevalve. A compromise used by the
Willys Jeep,
Rover,
Land Rover, and
Rolls-Royce in the 1950s was the
"F-head" (or "intake-over-exhaust" valving), which has one sidevalve and one overhead valve per cylinder. The flathead's elongated combustion chamber is prone to
preignition (or "knocking") if compression ratio is increased, but improvements such as
laser ignition or microwave enhanced ignition might help prevent knocking. Turbulence grooves may increase
swirl inside the combustion chamber, thus increasing torque, especially at low rpm. Better mixing of the fuel/air charge improves combustion and helps to prevent knocking. An advance in flathead technology resulted from experimentation in the 1920s by
Sir Harry Ricardo, who improved their efficiency after studying the gas-flow characteristics of sidevalve engines. The difficulty in designing a high-compression-ratio flathead means that most tend to be spark-ignition designs, and flathead diesels are virtually unknown. ==History and applications==