suction stroke and exhaust strokes are the two strokes involved in 2 stroke engine....
The engine is a 2 stroke 'semi' diesel. Inlet and exhaust are as per 'normal' two stroke diesel but the injected fuel is not ignited by compression alone as in a normal diesel. Instead a 'hot bulb' on the cylinder head is heated with a blow-lamp before starting and heat from this, transferred to a tube in the combustion chamber which ignites the fuel to start the engine. Once running the engine itself maintains the temperature. Often called a Hot Bulb Engine.
In the two stroke petrol engine as you know suction,compression,ignition,expansion and exhaust is completed in only two stroke and one revolution of crank wheel more over diesel ignites at very high pressure which is not the same in case of petrol........if petrol is also ignited under pressure it explodes producing a big thumping sound.called KNOCKINGthis may reduce the power output and also lead to breakdown of the engine. For the above reason two stroke engine cannot compress air and ignite the fuel like diesel engine.
A diesel engine is an internal combustion engine which uses the heat of compression to ignite the fuel/air mixture in the third stroke of the 4-stroke cycle, while the petrol engine is an internal combustion engine which uses an electrically-generated spark system to do the ignition. Diesel engines have a higher efficiency compared to petrol engines. In simple terms this means diesel engines can give 50% or more miles per gallon than petrol engines.
Dr. Rudolph Diesel first worked on the Diesel cycle using powdered coal dust on a slow speed two stroke engine. So the Diesel cycle came first and later developments led to Diesel engines. Sadly, Dr. Diesel committed suicide by jumping from a boat.
In my point of view two stroke engine is the best engine ,because in two stroke engine there are only two stages or two stroke .In which one stage complete the two process frist is suction & second one is compression ,in these two process completes in one stage. The best advantage of this engine is the in every cycle there is a power stroke due to which the engine performance is very good . But the biggest disadvantage is the fuel consumption . Which after some time reduced by the resarcheres.
It could be anything. The difference between the two is that in a two-stroke engine the piston goes back and forth (two strokes) for every ignition event (spark plug firing for a gas engine or fuel injection for a Diesel), while it goes back and forth twice (four strokes) for a four stroke engine.
A two stroke engine combines the four strokes of a typical internal combustion engine into two strokes instead of four.
A two stroke engine has half the strokes of an otto (or four stroke) engine, therefore it takes two crankshaft roatations to complete a cycle on a four stroke engine and only one revolution in a two stroke engine. There are several types of two stroke engines, the different types have to do with how the receive the air/fuel mixture, also you have two stroke diesel engines.
Detroit diesel engine is an example of two stroke engine
intake and exhaust
Four stroke engines are quieter than two strokes, but have less power.
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
In a two-stroke engine, two strokes is one cycle. In a four stroke engine, four strokes is one complete cycle. A stroke is a part of a cycle. Remember that the "up" motion and the "down" motion each count as one stroke.
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.
two stroke diesel engine is used in cargo ships as cross head type engines, two stroke petrol engines used in two wheelers.
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
It depends on the type of engine. In a four-stroke engine, there are four strokes - intake, compression, power (combustion), and exhaust - required to complete one full rotation of the crankshaft. In a two-stroke engine, there are two strokes - compression/ignition and exhaust - needed to complete one rotation.