no it cant be used bcoz a automobile engine is either 2 or 4 strokes were a rotary engine needs many cylinders......................
Automobile engines are ic (internal combustion).
The invention that made the creation of automobile and airplane possible was the internal combustion engine. Almost all vehicles use internal combustion engines. They are used in the form of gas turbines in jet aircrafts, large ships and helicopters.
They need torque in order to pull a heavy load. The bigger the engine the more torque it can produce. The use of Turbo Chargers & computer management has made it possible to downsize truck engines somewhat but they are still very large when compared to an automobile engine.
A governor in gasoline engines is a device to control the amount of fuel available in order to maintain a predetermined RPM for the engine.
The gasoline engine.
For example, an automobile engine, or similar explosion engines. Also, a steam engine.
Yes, injected engines do not use a traditional carburetor. EFI gas engines do not have a carburetor, and diesel engines do not use a carburetor.
What, flying a plane with a Wankel rotary engine instead of a piston engine? It's been done, but there are a lot of problems with it. One of the big ones is efficiency: a Wankel engine is 25 percent less efficient than a piston engine. It's also water-cooled, and that adds weight. You have to mess with the ignition system to get the redundant ignition system the FAA requires--they want you to have two completely separate ignitions in your plane so if one stops working the plane keeps running. Also, airplane engines are made to run at a constant speed, which car engines are not.
The gasoline engine.
The Smart cars have three cylinder engines, as did some Geo cars.
Most basic difference: The automobile engine is overwhelmingly a gasoline engine. Rail engines were steam at first, and today are either diesel or electric. To my knowledge, there has never been a gasoline railroad locomotive.
You eating the engine.