Yes.
No, the Distributor delivers high-voltage electricity to the Spark Plugs.
To deliver something in record time is to deliver the something ahead of schedule.
I don't think your car has a distributor cap. I believe it has an electronic ignition and only has an ignition coil to deliver spark to the plugs. Where this is located, I do not know.
It is still "deliver" ex: I will deliver this tomorrow. Or you could say something like "I will be delivering this tomorrow"
If it doesn't have a distributor, you probably have an electronically controlled ignition. Coil packs deliver the spark to the spark plugs when the computer tells them to fire.
To deliver an electric charge to each cylinder at just the right time so the spark plugs can ignite the fuel.
False. The primary job of the distributor is to transport electricity from the transmission system to the distribution system and then deliver it to end users at lower voltages. The conversion of voltage levels is typically done by transformers at substations, not by the distributor.
it wasn't delivered because Friar John, who was supposed to deliver it was quarantined because of the plague
Your coil-packs are what deliver spark to your spark plug. This way there is no need for the old distributor style stuff. Plus it's a lot easier to replace a coil-pack than it is to replace a distributor
It is a device connected to an engines cam that is made to deliver a high voltage spark to the combustion chamber at a precise moment through a spark plug.
A wholesale distributor could be considered successful when they have a great deal of customers and they deliver to large and small companies alike and can keep up with the demand and deliver large amounts of items without fail.
When you serve something you deliver it, when you sell something people pick it up.