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// About This Engine
A Century-Old Cadence, Back on Your Desk
Between 1895 and 1930, the hit-and-miss stationary engine was the backbone of rural America.
Before electric motors reached the countryside, before tractors replaced draft animals, this single-cylinder machine did the work — powering cement mixers on construction sites, water pumps on homesteads, grain mills, sawmills, and feed grinders from coast to coast. Farmers depended on it. Contractors relied on it. It was everywhere.
What set it apart from every engine before or since was its governor. A centrifugal flyweight system that let the engine fire only when it needed to, and coast on pure flywheel inertia the rest of the time. That gave it its sound — that unmistakable clack — clack — clack that anyone who grew up around one never forgets.
Millions were built. Many are still running today, more than a century later.
The RETROL & OKMO N01 faithfully recreates that machine at 1/5 scale.
No plastic in the structural core. No electronics hiding the mechanism. Just sand-cast brass, precision-machined steel, a mechanical trip igniter, and dual heavy flywheels doing exactly what they did in 1900 — holding momentum through the miss, delivering power on the hit.
Every phase of the four-stroke cycle unfolds in full view. The open-crank architecture conceals nothing: piston, connecting rod, ignition points, glass drip oiler, steam hopper — all exposed, all working.
// How It Works
The Hit & Miss Cycle
Flyweights retract inward
Exhaust valve closes
Ignition points trip
Power stroke fires
Speed restored
Flyweights extend outward
Exhaust valve locks open
No compression · No ignition
Engine coasts on flywheel inertia
"clack — clack — clack"
// See It Run
Watch the Hit & Miss in Action
The centrifugal governor at work — flyweights extend on the miss, retract on the hit. No tricks. This is exactly what it sounds like on your desk.
// Specifications
Technical Specifications
// Features
Built Without Compromise
Cast + CNC Composite Construction
The structural core starts with premium sand-cast brass — the same process used on full-size industrial hardware — then every critical surface is finish-machined on a CNC center. Tighter tolerances, sharper edges, smoother bores. At 1.5 kg the heft is immediately apparent. This is a piece you pick up once and never put down.
Cast + CNC Composite ProcessFully Open-Crank Architecture
Every moving part is exposed. Watch the piston reciprocate, the connecting rod sweep, and the mechanical ignition points trip in real time. All four strokes unfold in front of you — intake, compression, power, exhaust. Nothing hidden, nothing sealed away.
Open Crank · No Cover PlatesVisible Glass Drip-Feed Oiler
A fully adjustable glass drip oiler delivers lubrication drop by drop to the crankshaft bearings — visible in real time. The same system that kept full-size early American stationary engines alive on the factory floor, now on your desk. Standard 10W-50 oil, no specialty products required.
Pre-mix + External Drip OilerEvaporative Hopper Cooling
The open-top water hopper absorbs combustion heat and releases a gentle mist of steam as it evaporates — exactly as it did in the field a century ago. Fill with tap or distilled water, top off for extended runs. No radiator, no pump, no closed loop required.
Open Hopper · Steam Venting// Manufacturing Upgrade
We Heard You. We Fixed It.
Cast + CNC. Not Cast Alone.
Early collectors were right to notice: pure casting leaves interior cavities rough, exterior edges soft, and bearing fits inconsistent. The N01 addresses this with a full CNC finishing pass across every critical surface after casting. The result is tighter bearing clearances, cleaner exterior geometry, and an engine that runs more quietly from the first start — not after a break-in period.
Tighter Tolerances · Quieter RunningSteel Where It Matters.
All-brass construction looks great at unboxing. It wears fast under load. Brass creeps under sustained stress and distorts with heat — which is why early miniature engines developed play in their bearings and lost compression over time. The N01's primary load-bearing components are machined from steel: harder, stronger, dimensionally stable across thousands of cycles. Brass stays where it belongs — as accent hardware and bearing surface.
Steel Core · No Long-Term Wear CreepFinish That Lasts.
Early production used spray lacquer — which chips off flywheel edges, fades with heat, and looks worn within a season of running. The N01 uses a high-temperature baked enamel coat bonded directly to the steel substrate. It survives engine heat, vibration, and outdoor humidity without lifting or chalking. The color you receive is the color it keeps.
Baked Enamel · Weather-ResistantMetal Sealing Ring. Not Rubber.
Early models used rubber O-rings as the primary cylinder seal. Rubber degrades with heat and fuel exposure — it swells, hardens, and eventually loses its seal, causing compression loss and oil leaks after extended use. The N01 replaces this with a precision-machined metal sealing ring: dimensionally stable at operating temperatures, chemically inert to gasoline and oil, and designed to maintain compression integrity across the long term.
Metal Ring · No Rubber Degradation// Starting Methods
Two Ways to Wake It Up
Manual Recoil Start
Wrap the included starter cord around the flywheel pulley and pull. The same ritual that started full-sized American farm engines on cold mornings — immediate mechanical feedback, no adapter, no batteries required.
Electric Drill Start
Chuck the included adapter rod into any cordless household drill, engage the starting shaft, and spin the engine to life in seconds. Ideal for quick demos, cold starts after storage, or fine-tuning the needle valve mid-session.
// Finishes
Three Period-Accurate Colorways
Each finish references a real tradition in American stationary engine history. All three share identical steel hardware, mechanical components, and hardwood display base. Click any image to view and order on the product page.
// In the Box
Everything You Need to Run
⚠ Not included — you'll need:
1× AA 1.5V battery · 92+ octane gasoline · 10W-50 oil (2-stroke or 4-stroke)
// FAQ
Common Questions
— RETROL × OKMO · N01 · 1/5 Scale Hit-and-Miss Engine —
AVAILABLE
JUNE 18, 2026
RTR · Factory-Tested · Shipped in Custom Shockproof Carton
Steel + Brass + Aluminum · High-Temp Baked Enamel · Hardwood Base
Ships from Sep 15, 2026 · Pre-order to lock in your price