Diesel engines were named after Rudolf Diesel (1858 - 1913) who was a German mechanical engineer. He invented the diesel engine to replace slower steam engines.
Anshika
Bangalore
The name diesel is as real as it gets. It's named after Rudolph Diesel, a German engineer who designed the diesel engine, to which the term diesel refers. The fuel used to power these engines is a form of petroleum, called diesel after the engine.
Compression ignition engine.
The German who invented the diesel engine in 1892 is Rudolph Kristian Karl Diesel. The fuel name is derived from his name.
Rudolf Diesel invented the diesel engine
The word "diesel" in French is still "diesel." It is the name of the man who invented the diesel engine, Rudolf Diesel, a Parisian-born German.
how diesel engine works. on which principle diesel engine works. who search the diesel engine. capacity of diesel engine. how we calculate the efficiency of diesel engine. firing order of diesel engine. any videos
Rudolf Diesel. Yes he invented the engine. The fuel came later and was named after him but he didnt invent diesel fuel. His wife insisted he name the engine after himself, he didnt want to.
the diesel engine was invented in 1892 by Rudolf Diesel. the diesel engine was invented in 1892 by Rudolf Diesel.
Its actually called a cummins diesel because that's the manufacturer of the engine. They are widely used because of the name and reputation that comes with them
green engine is 6stroke engine and diesel engine is 4 stroke
wartsila, this is the name of an engine , which is 2-stroke long diesel engine with the 1,09,000 brake horsepower.
This comes after the name of Rudolf Diesel who succeeded to build his well-known high-compression prototype engine in 1897. Rudolf Diesel was credited with this innovation.The diesel engine (also known as a compression-ignition engine) is an internal combustion engine that uses the heat of compression to initiate ignition and burn the fuel that has been injected into the combustion chamber. This contrasts with spark-ignition engines such as a petrol engine (gasoline engine) or gas engine (using a gaseous fuel as opposed to gasoline), which use a spark plug to ignite an air-fuel mixture.