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Sunday, January 2, 2011

2- stroke engine



Engineering >> How Things Work >> How 2-Stroke Engines Work
Introduction

If you have read How Car Engines Work and How Diesel Engines Work, then you are familiar with the two types of engines found in nearly every car and truck on the road today. Both gasoline and diesel automotive engines are classified as four-stroke reciprocating internal-combustion engines.
There is a third type of engine, known as a two-stroke engine, that is commonly found in lower-power applications. Some of the devices that might have a two-stroke engine include:
  • Lawn and garden equipment (chain saws, leaf blowers, trimmers)
  • Dirt bikes
  • Mopeds
  • Jet skis
  • Small outboard motors
  • Radio-controlled model planes
In this article, you'll learn all about the two-stroke engine: how it works, why it might be used and what makes it different from regular car and diesel engines.

Two-stroke Basics

This is what a two-stroke engine looks like:
You find two-stroke engines in such devices as chain saws and jet skis because two-stroke engines have three important advantages over four-stroke engines:
  • Two-stroke engines do not have valves, which simplifies their construction and lowers their weight.
  • Two-stroke engines fire once every revolution, while four-stroke engines fire once every other revolution. This gives two-stroke engines a significant power boost.
  • Two-stroke engines can work in any orientation, which can be important in something like a chainsaw. A standard four-stroke engine may have problems with oil flow unless it is upright, and solving this problem can add complexity to the engine.
Horsepower : For a complete explanation of what horsepower is and what it means to performance, check out How Horsepower Works.

These advantages make two-stroke engines lighter, simpler and less expensive to manufacture. Two-stroke engines also have the potential to pack about twice the power into the same space because there are twice as many power strokes per revolution. The combination of light weight and twice the power gives two-stroke engines a great power-to-weight ratio compared to many four-stroke engine designs.

You don't normally see two-stroke engines in cars, however. That's because two-stroke engines have a couple of significant disadvantages that will make more sense once we look at how it operates.
















1 comment:

  1. ELECTRO-MECH ENGINEERS - Manufacturer and exporter of centrifugal blowers, industrial radiator, automotive radiator, stainless steel welded pipes, stainless steel sheets, heat exchangers, flanges, pipes, electro-mechengineers, safflower oil, gum arabic, orthopaedic implants, orthopaedic instruments, India.

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