Up for the Down Stroke was created in 1973.
Stroke You Up was created on 1994-07-14.
You would stroke a girl on her hair
A stroke is the movement of a piston up or down.
A stroke in an internal combustion engine is when a piston moves up or down.
In a 4-stroke engine, the piston goes up and down twice to complete one full cycle. This means the piston moves up once during the compression stroke and again during the exhaust stroke, while moving down during the intake and power strokes. Thus, for every complete 4-stroke cycle, the piston makes two complete movements (up and down).
No. How could there be? The "stroke" of an engine is the piston going up or down. If the spark plug fires and piston goes down, then up,and then fires again, then it's a two-stroke engine. IN a 4-stroke engine, the spark plug fires, piston does down, then up to exhaust the cylinder, then down to suck in fresh air and cool the cylinder, and up again to compress, and the spark plug fires every other "up". How could you have a "three-stroke" engine? The spark plug fires and the explosion pushes the piston down, and the crankshaft pushes it back up. Then back down. If the spark plug fires while the piston is DOWN, the engine will seize up. Nope. In a piston engine, the number of "strokes" is always an even number. For radial or Wankel engines, things are different - but in those there is no piston, and no "stroke".
Up There Down There was created in 1988.
The Finishing Stroke was created in 1958.
1-2-3-4 crankshaft is balanced during manufacturing and is intended to have 1 up in compression stroke while 2 is down after intake stroke, 3 is up after exhaust stroke, and 4 is down after power stroke, all at the same instant, as they rotate through the firing order.
The Stroke was created on 1981-05-04.
Up the Down Staircase was created in 1965.
Up from Down Under was created in 1987.