no
The internal combustion engine.
A rocket engine carries its own supply of oxidizer, which provides the oxygen needed for combustion to occur. This allows rockets to operate in the vacuum of space where there is no external source of oxygen.
depends on the cc of the combustion chamber
Oil.
The internal combustion engine is used in almost everything that needs power or motive traction. Cars, trucks, motorcycles, boats, ships, aircraft, and many other things use internal combustion engines. The internal combustion engine is needed to convert fuel chemical energy to rotational mechanical energy, which can now be used for many different applications.
Approximately 5,000 gallons of air are needed to burn one gallon of gasoline in an internal combustion engine. This air combines with the fuel in a precise ratio for efficient combustion to power the engine.
combustion and expansion
Any Ford vehicle with an identical 8th digit of VIN. The 8th digit is the engine code. However, if you get an engine that was attached to an automatic transmission you can not use the flywheel (you can tell just by looking at them when you have both engines side to side). You can take the flywheel off your current engine and have an automotive machine shop inspect and resurface it or buy a new flywheel. And if the engine you buy has a manual tranny flywheel you should have it inspected and resurfaced anyway (or replace if needed).
No. Chevy uses a number of different noses for their starters. The size of the flywheel and year and model of engine determine what nose is needed. The 153 tooth flywheel is smaller in diamaiater than the 168 tooth flywheel. If you want to use a starter from a 168 tooth flywheel on a 153 tooth flywheel the nose from the smaller flywheel starter will have to be exchanged onto the larger flywheel prior to using it.
The internal combustion engine seemed to be a pretty signifiant forerunner to modern cars.
500 fuel of glen
Flywheel Torque 61-69 Foot pounds