Oil fuel mix ratio is different for different engines, please contact the manufacturer
Fuel air mixture is the same @ 17 to 1 by weight.
No..the compression ratio is much higher eg a small petrol engine will have a ratio of 8:1 where a diesel small engine has around 17:1..
Most engines after the early 70's take a 50/1 ratio,until they became injected.
Carburetors are used on engines not equipped with fuel injection. Almost all small engines, such as lawnmowers, generators, and other small engine applications use carburetors. Carburetors are used to mix fuel and air in the proper ratio and channel it to the intake manifold of the engine. It is then sucked into each cylinder where the fuel air mixture is burned.
The compression ratio for NASCAR engines is limited to 12.0:1.
A 4-cycle engine will mix gasoline with air during the intake stroke at aprox 14.7 (air) to 1 (gasoline) ratio.
A 4-cycle engine will mix gasoline with air during the intake stroke at aprox 14.7 (air) to 1 (gasoline) ratio.
most two stroke engines need a 2% mix but you should look at the manufacturer recomondation.
run 32:1 pre mix ratio 4oz oil to 1 gal of gass these little engines turn high rpms they need lots of lubrication
35:1 is the fuel mix ratio
The proper fuel mix for all Husqvarna two cycle engines is 50:1 or 2.6 oz of oil per gallon of unleaded 89 octane or higher gasoline.
You can not correlate cc to horsepower, it just doesn't work. Many small high speed engines may have incredible hp / size ratio, but conventional auto engines are different.
The mix of fuel to oil ratio is 16:1