Yes but only in the right conditions. If diesel is outside just on the road, for example, then no it will not ignite from a flame.
No, diesel at room temperature will not ignite if you direct a naked flame to it.
It is not the fuel that ignites it is the fumes. Any spark or flame will ignite the fumes.
No #4 diesel fuel oil is for oil burners and will not ignite in a diesel egine
Diesel engines rely on heat and high compression to ignite fuel.
'Diesel' comes the German engineer, Rudoplf Diesel. Diesel invented an internal combustion engine that would auto ignite, when the fuel vapours were compressed to a high degree. This increased the temperature of the vapour to the point were it would auto ignite. The fuel that he used was slightly different from petrol, which needed an electrical spark to ignite. This slightly different fuel is now known as 'Diesel'.
The fuel will not ignite properly.
The engine's pistons compress the fuel (an air and diesel oil mixture) in the cylinders and the heat generated by that compression causes the fuel to ignite.A longer answerDiesel engines ignite their fuel solely by means of compression: whilst spark plugs are used to ignite the gasoline fuel and air mixture in gasoline engines, in diesel engines the diesel oil and air mixture is compressed to a very much higher degree, which causes a lot of heat. The resulting very high temperature causes the fuel to self-ignite.
35 c
Fuel, Oxygen and a spark to ignite the flame. Use the Fire triangle.
No diesel engines use the "heat of compression" to cause fuel to ignite not electrical ignition.
Yes it can if the fuel gets hot enough to ignite as in leaking on a header.
because of in the diesel engine fuel injector is uses for ignite the charge & they are operated by fuel pump not to electricity and in the diesel engine there is no requirement of spark plug to genrate the spark