Four cylinders fire for each revolution of the engine.
It is the octane number range the distributor automatic spark advance can handle without the engine knocking.
Two. Intake, and exhaust.
It's the engine that makes the propeller go fast, not the number of blades.
this das weird man. I asked em dis question but they ain't telled me the anser instead they teld me to anser it moiself.
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On a 4-cylinder engine with a firing order of 1342, if number 1 cylinder is on the exhaust stroke, the number 3 cylinder will be on the induction stroke.
The firing order on a 1999 Camry 4 cylinder is 1, 3, 4, 2. The number one cylinder is at the rear of the engine.
The number of a cylinder indicates the firing order of the spark in a sequence consistent with the number of cylinders.
The firing order for a 3.4 Impala engine is 1-2-3-4-5-6. The number one cylinder is the rear cylinder on the passenger side.
The back is the front and the front is number 1
Mostly Number 1 cylinder is the frontmost cylinder. Some older cars ( Alfa's are one ) the number one cylinder is the back cylinder
The firing order for the 1986 Dodge Ram D50 4cyl Mitsubishi engine is 1, 3, 4, 2. The number one cylinder is at the front of the engine compartment.
The firing order for a VW Jetta 1991 4-cylinder 1.8 is 1, 3, 4, 2. The number 1 cylinder is closest to the pulley on the engine.
The firing order for a Mitsubishi 1.8 liter engine is 1, 3, 4, 2. The number one cylinder is on the left side, closest to the engine pulley.
check your compression on #4 cyl
passenger side are cylinder numbers 1,3,5, and 7 drivers side are cylinder number 2,4,6, and 8 firing order is 1,8,4,3,6,5,7,2
Number 1 cylinder is the front cylinder....1..2..3..4 front to back.