Yes, during the compression stroke.
It ignites the compressed air/fuel mixture.
The fuel/air mixture in the cylinder is compressed to the point where it gets hot enough to self ignite.The fuel/air mixture in the cylinder is compressed to the point where it gets hot enough to self ignite.
Most SCUBA divers dive with compressed air, which is normal atmospheric air compressed into a scuba tank.
air enters the engine + air is compressed fuel is then added to the mix + compressed this mixture is ignited the mixture erupts + pushes forward in the engine then bounces out the rear creating thrust ascend elevators go up and descend elevators go down
in steam engines, the steam has to be compressed, which needs less torque than the internal combustion engine, where fuel air mixture is compressed Hence, the case!
The fuel/air mixture is compressed by the piston moving upwards, the spark plug ignites that mixture and causes an explosion which pushes the piston downward.
An internal combustion engine is an engine that uses air, fuel, and spark to create the power to move. A perfect air-fuel mixture is pulled into the cumbustion chamber, its compressed by the piston, and once its compressed the spark plug ignites the air-fuel mixture and the process is completed.
In standard cars is it simply compressed air. The same mixture we breathe.
it is ignited due to the high temperature caused by the pressure inside cylinder, when it is compressed.
Yes, LPG (liquefied petroleum gas) is a mixture of propane and butane gases. These gases are compressed into a liquid form for easier storage and transportation, and are commonly used as fuel for heating, cooking, and vehicles.
Af/a7sx
To provide an electrical spark to ignite the compressed air/fuel mixture in a gasoline powered engine.