A stokker.
A group of firefighters who are assigned to a truck or engine would be called a "company".
the engine boss.... LOL
What fires the injectors on a 1986 ford 150 truck
No, muck fires can start anywhere there is muck. That's why they're called MUCK fires, not Florida fires.
on 2 stroke engines the cylinder fires everytime the piston comes up. on 4 stroke engines the cylinder fires every other time the piston comes up http://videos.howstuffworks.com/user/4729-two-stroke-cycle-engine-video.htm
Class A fires are called "ordinary combustibles". Wood or clothing fires are examples of Class A fires.
No. How could there be? The "stroke" of an engine is the piston going up or down. If the spark plug fires and piston goes down, then up,and then fires again, then it's a two-stroke engine. IN a 4-stroke engine, the spark plug fires, piston does down, then up to exhaust the cylinder, then down to suck in fresh air and cool the cylinder, and up again to compress, and the spark plug fires every other "up". How could you have a "three-stroke" engine? The spark plug fires and the explosion pushes the piston down, and the crankshaft pushes it back up. Then back down. If the spark plug fires while the piston is DOWN, the engine will seize up. Nope. In a piston engine, the number of "strokes" is always an even number. For radial or Wankel engines, things are different - but in those there is no piston, and no "stroke".
An Archer
Shooter
An Archer
A bowman.
Any V8 engine, operating at 1,000 RPM, fires 4,000 times in a minute. If operating at 2,000 RPM, it fires 8,000 times in a minute.