The engine will pass unburnt fuel out the exhaust when you: Have a misfire in one or more cylinders which occurs when: The combustion chamber is provided either too much or not enough of air/fuel The spark plug gap is wrong or the spark lacks voltage or the timing of the spark The compression of a cylinder is low It could simply be an oxygen sensor is faulty, or it could be a combination of issues.
Fuel burning is the burning of fuel. In an automobile engine it is called combustion. The gasoline mixed with oxygen and ignited by the spark plugs explodes.
Burning fuel.Burning fuel.Burning fuel.Burning fuel.
Friction, and burning fuel.
By burning the hydrogen and making water.
Because it is burning fuel in its cylinders.
Depends on what fuel you are burning
burning fuel
The engine is burning fuel.
make the fuel sufficient burning
Sand? burning in an engine? No. No. NO. Calorific value is the heat produced by burning fuel. Sand won't burn.
It depends on the type of engine and how high of octane you are running. Octane slows the burning of fuel, so if it is too high of octane for the engine, you will end up burning out your exhaust valves because burning fuel is being pushed out of them. 92 or 93 octane that is available at fuel pumps as "premium" fuel is ok for most engines. I wouldn't run anything over about 100 octane.
It's possible if engine is flooding