YES the oxidizer and propelant are mixed into a chamber the ignited.
A heater can be either an internal combustion engine or an external combustion engine, depending on its design and operation. Internal combustion engines generate heat through the combustion of fuel within the engine itself, while external combustion engines produce heat by burning fuel outside the engine to heat a working fluid. Common examples of heaters include furnaces (external combustion) and car engines (internal combustion). The specific classification depends on how and where the combustion occurs in relation to the heat-producing mechanism.
Gasoline, internal combustion,
Yes. Heat engines come in various forms. For example, internal combustion using gasoline or diesel, external combustion (not much used), steam engines reciprocating or turbine, gas turbines, rocket engines.
internal and external combustion engine
internal and external combustion engine
They are both internal combustion engines
Reciprocating engines (piston engines) are internal combustion engines. Rotary engines ( Wankel engine) is also an internal combustion engine. In general, all types of engines in which the combustion chamber is an integrating part of the engine is considered a internal combustion engine.
Harry R. Ricardo has written: 'Engines of high output' -- subject(s): Engines 'The internal-combustion engine' -- subject(s): Internal combustion engines 'The high-speed internal-combustion engine' -- subject(s): Internal combustion engines
No, they are both internal combustion engines.
Gasoline and Diesel engines are internal combustion engines. The fuel explodes (combusts) internally (in the cylinder) and releases energy that is used to move the vehicle. Electric engines and steam engines are not internal combustion engines by definition. Steam engines combust their fuel externally to the "engine". The vast majority of passenger vehicles produced throughout history are driven by internal combustion engines.
SIC 3694 applies to ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT FOR INTERNAL COMBUSTION ENGINES.
Internal combustion.
Well, you have rocket engines and jet engines which aren't internal combustion engines, and various types of internal combustion (Otto cycle -- what you probably have in most cars, Diesel cycle like small diesel cars and trucks, Wankel cycle like in Mazda rotary engines like the RX series, and 2-stroke like in dirt bikes and lawnmowers). There are also Stirling engines which work on heat differential but don't make a lot of power and are usually quite tiny and for demonstration or cooling purposes. So yes, internal combustion engines are a type of engine.
Engines can be classified into five main categories: internal combustion engines, which burn fuel to create power; external combustion engines, where fuel is burned outside the engine, such as steam engines; electric engines, which convert electrical energy into mechanical energy; hybrid engines, combining internal combustion and electric power sources; and rocket engines, designed for propulsion in space by expelling mass at high velocity. Each type serves different applications and operates on distinct principles.
what is disadvantage of enternal combustion engine
Lester Clyde Lichty has written: 'Internal-combustion engines' -- subject(s): Internal combustion engines
James W. Murrell has written: 'A research plan to study emissions from small internal combustion engines' -- subject(s): Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Internal combustion engines, Internal combustion engines