Internal combustion engine.
Yes
Currently they are all internal combustion, the last steam powered truck was built in 1945.
it should start at cold
It weighs 120 tons more heavy than a truck
Here are examples of man-made sound. 1) speech 2) music, whether vocal or instrumental 3) crowd noise, as at a place of assembly (e.g. theatre, stadium, airport, shopping mall) 4) gunshots 5) machinery at a factory 6) a combustion engine, as from a motor vehicle (e.g. automobile, motorcycle) 7) a helicopter 8) a jet engine as from aircraft 9) a bomb explosion 10) a clock ticking 11) a rocket engine as from spacecraft 12) a train whistle 13) a siren as from a fire truck
Shaft horsepower is the power output from an engine after it is put through the gear train and other components that result in a loss of power. It is usually used in respect to aeroplanes and ships though it can be used as the power output from a cars gearbox. Brake horsepower is the power an engine puts out at the crank and is not subject to losses. It is always higher than the true horsepower. The true horsepower or rear wheel horsepower is the power that is actually driving a vehicle foreward and is probably the most important for comparing motor vehicles. Horsepower itself is the imperial unit for power, like the metric systems Watt. 1 hp = 0.75kW
Currently they are all internal combustion, the last steam powered truck was built in 1945.
A combustion engine that isn't on the move, it's stationary regardless of engine speed. Applications for such a engine are typically generators for large buildings, such as hospitals where a heavy duty diesel engine (truck engine) is connected to a generator which in turn generates electricity.
You cannot use water in an engine instead of petrol. The internal combustion engine of a car or truck requires the ignition of gases in order to create power. This doesn't happen with water.
When a timing belt breaks on any internal combustion engine, the cam can no longer turn. The valves can no longer operate. And the engine stops. You are stuck. You will wait for the tow truck.
See the Related Link for "Wikipedia" to the bottom for the answer. Here is additional input: * Gottlieb Daimler (1834-1900)was known as the pioneer of internal combustion engines and for the development of the automobile. He invented what some consider the first motorcycle (a 2 wheeler fitted with a petrol engine). He also fitted similar motors onto a stagecoach and a boat. Daimler and his partner, William Maybach are renowned as the inventors of the internal combustion engine. P.S. He did not as far as I know invent a "truck".
The same as any other combustion engine. You can research combustion process for more. It's a 4 cycle process.
60cc
The engine computer is the voltage regulator.
Excessive internal engine wear (bad rings)
Depends on the vehicle. if you mean Heavy truck like a eighteen wheeler or dump truck then most of them use Diesel engines. If you mean light duty truck like a 1500 Chevy or dodge or f150 its gasoline. If heavyer then that it could be either gas or diesel.
The term jet engine is loosely referring to an internal combustion airbreathing jet engine. A turbo, or turbocharger is a device, usually fitted to a car or truck, to increase an engine's efficiency by forcing more air into the combustion chamber. I can see how you might have confused the two, as they are both primarily based on a turbine-driven design.
if advancing more than factory specs it can cause pre ignition (spark knock) that in turn can cause internal engine damage