On a 2 stroke engine, each cylinder fires every time the piston comes up. On a 4 stroke engine, the cylinder only fires every OTHER time the piston comes up. 4 stroke engines have 4 strokes: Intake, compression, power, and exhaust. 2 stroke engines complete these cycles in only two strokes of the piston by use of ports in the cylinder walls. 2 stroke engines usually produce more power for a given weight/size. But, in gasoline engines, 2 stroke engines are typically less efficient (use more gas) and have much higher pollution levels (note: some newer "direct injection" 2 stroke engines do much better on pollution levels than the typical 2 stroke)
It would depend on what was wrong with the engine. More details are required.
Four cylinders fire for each revolution of the engine.
Hi, The answer for your question would be, the timing will set based on crank angle position only as it is done in 4 stroke engine. It differs for a TBI based engine and GDI based engine.
the cc stands for cubic centimeters, so 1200 cc is the total displacement of the engine. It is the total volume, that the cylinders would displace for each stroke. For example. Suppose you have 4 cylinders in an engine. If each cylinder displaces 300cc for each stroke ( from Top dead centre to bottom dead centre), then it equals 1200cc for 4 cylinders.
A four stroke engine has 4 strokes per cycle, whereas the two stroke engine has only 2 strokes per cycle. Since the 2 stroke engine has twice as many power strokes as a 4 stroke engine at a given rpm, the 2 stroke is capable of making nearly twice the power of a 4 stroke for a given displacement.
2 stroke means it takes two strokes for a power stroke and 4 sroke takes four strokes for power stroke so in otherwise 2 strokes are way faster and more torqey
2 strokes to many
1 Intake stroke 2 Compression stroke3 Power stroke4 Exhaust stroke
No difference.
4 strokes for a four stroke, intake, compression,powewr, exhaust
Depends on if this engine is a 2 stroke, 4 stroke, or rotary engine. I assume you are referring to a 4 stroke as found in the vast majority of automobiles built today. The answer is, At the top of the compression stroke. The 4 strokes of a 4 cycle engine are:# intake/induction stroke # compression stroke # power stroke # exhaust strokeDepends on if this engine is a 2 stroke, 4 stroke, or rotary engine. I assume you are referring to a 4 stroke as found in the vast majority of automobiles built today. The answer is, At the top of the compression stroke. The 4 strokes of a 4 cycle engine are:# intake/induction stroke # compression stroke # power stroke # exhaust stroke
The 4 strokes of an internal combustion engine are as follows:- 1 Induction stroke 2 Compression stroke 3 Power stroke 4 Exhaust stoke
Diesel engines can be built in both 2-stroke and 4-stroke
all strokes are the same intake, compression, power, exhaust but it all happens in 2 revolutions of the crank instead of four revolutions like 4 stroke. Also 2 stroke has no valves and four stroke has intake and exhaust valves. hope this helps
The 4 strokes of an internal combustion engine are as follows:- 1 Induction stroke 2 Compression stroke 3 Power stroke 4 Exhaust stoke
in a two stoke engine ther is only two steps before it starts the cycle over, in a 4 stroke engine there is 4 strokes