same direction and forward.
your timing can not be right
The difference is in the size of the engine. Specifically in the intake and exhaust ports. The bore and stroke of the crank and pistons and the size of the combustion chambers.
Is there white smoke coming out of your exhaust pipe , even when the engine is warmed up? That's the most obvious sign that coolant is getting into an engine cylinder from a bad head gasket , a warped or cracked head
The power stroke * intake / compression / power / exhaust
There are ( 8 PISTONS ) in a V8 engine
12 thousandths on both intake and exhaust valves is the clearance on that Z24 engine
Rotary engines do not have pistons.
Not as long as your aftermarket exhaust is keeping backpressure in your system. Backpressure keeps the pistons from creating a vacuum in your exhaust and actually sucking harmful substances back into the chamber before the exhaust valve in the head can fully close, but keep your backpressure, save your engine.
It had a turbine engine, not a motor with pistons.
pistons, cylinders, intake valve, exhaust valve, spark plugs, camshaft, crankshaft. don't forget the block. True! But do I get a trust point for what I did list? :)
Pistons, cylinders, crankshaft, crankcase, oil pan, spark plug, camshaft, connecting rod, rod bearing, exhaust valve, intake valve.
The physics behind a moving car is that when fuel is sent to the engine from the fuel tank, the fuel injectors spray the fuel in the space above the pistons in the engine where it reacts with the air as combustion, pushing the pistons down. When that air is evacuated through the exhaust the pistons again come up and the process mentioned above repeats resulting in the circular movement of axle due to which the tires move.