Plunger stroke is the speed on the engine. This is the injection system on a diesel.
The Powerstroke was introduced in 1995, the difference is direct injection. The pre1995 engines were indirect injection
Diesel engines are classified primarily based on their design and application, including two main categories: two-stroke and four-stroke engines. They can also be categorized by their use, such as light-duty (for vehicles), medium-duty (for trucks), and heavy-duty (for industrial applications). Additionally, diesel engines can be classified by their fuel injection methods, such as direct injection or indirect injection. Other classifications include turbocharged versus naturally aspirated engines, as well as air-cooled versus liquid-cooled systems.
Diesel engines can be built in both 2-stroke and 4-stroke
you cant turn a 2 stroke into a four stroke. and i don't think you can run diesel in a 2 stroke
The air intake system, carbourator or fuel injection system, combustion chamber, ignition source (spark or compression), and exhaust port or valve. This is very broad you could find much more by specifics looking into 4 stoke gasoline engines, 2 stroke gasoline engines, 4 stroke Diesel engines, and 2 stroke Diesel engines.
Sure. Bigger diesels are very often 2-stroke. With forced induction(turbos, superchargers), fuel injection and pressure lubrication they don't suffer the drawbacks of the small 2-strokes of pollution and excessive fuel consumption.
Dietroit Diesel
can anyone answer me what is the 2 names of 2 stroke engine and define its name or meaning..
where is the crank sensor located on a 6.0l ford power stroke diesel
Because diesel is efficient fuel which decreases the stroke
What is the purpose of the intake stroke
green engine is 6stroke engine and diesel engine is 4 stroke