You can't, because they're all different.
I'm going to use horsepower instead of kW here because I'm an American and that's how we think; if you'd like to convert to kW, one HP is roughly 750 watts.
Let us examine the very common 1.6 liter engine. Every automaker has built one and they're all different. A Volkswagen Beetle 1.6 liter engine produced somewhere between 50 and 60 HP. Honda made one that put out about 120 HP. Mini Coopers have available to them an engine of the same size that makes 180 HP, and the 2014 Formula 1 race engine is a 1.6 liter V6 that makes 600 HP.
Internal combustion engines burn fuel inside the engine to generate power, while external combustion engines burn fuel outside the engine and use the resulting heat to create power, such as in steam engines. Internal combustion engines are more common in vehicles due to their compact size and efficiency, while external combustion engines are used in specific applications like power plants and some marine propulsion systems.
The term you are looking for is "knock" in relation to combustion in internal combustion engines, specifically in the context of gasoline engines.
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) is the oxide of nitrogen produced by forest fires and internal combustion engines. It is a reddish-brown gas that contributes to air pollution and can have harmful effects on human health and the environment.
In science class you will have to do a project using combustion
If the lawnmower is not electric powered then is is probably operated by an internal combustion engine (petrol or diesel. Oddly enough, very early lawnmowers were steam powered, which means they were examples of external combustion engines.
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.
An internal combustion engine is a type of heat engine that generates mechanical energy by burning fuel inside the engine. A heat engine, on the other hand, is a broader category of engines that convert heat energy into mechanical work through various processes, including combustion, thermodynamic cycles, and heat transfer. In essence, all internal combustion engines are heat engines, but not all heat engines are internal combustion engines.
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.
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
No, the explosion of compressed gases powers internal combustion.