| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.04 |
| Score | 0% | 61% |
The combustion chamber is enclosed by the:
head gasket |
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cylinder head |
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piston |
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piston ring |
Cylinders act as a guide for the pistons that translate the heat energy of combustion into the mechanical energy necessary to move a vehicle. Piston rings seal the piston to the cylinder to contain combustion gases and also regulate the oil distribution between the piston and cylinder wall. A cylinder head closes in the top of the cylinder forming the combustion chamber which is sealed by a head gasket (head). The head provides space for air and fuel intake valves, exhaust valves, and mounts for spark plugs and fuel injectors.
Which engine stroke starts with the piston at top dead center?
exhaust stroke |
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compression stroke |
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power stroke |
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intake stroke |
The four-stroke piston cycle of internal combustion engines starts with the piston at top of the cylinder head (top dead center or TDC) during the intake stroke. The piston moves downward in the cylinder creating a vacuum that pulls an air-fuel mix into the combustion chamber through the now open intake valve.
What is the primary difference between internal and external combustion engines?
how the fuel is ignited |
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where the power is developed |
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the type of fuel used |
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the air-fuel mix for optimum combustion |
The primary difference between internal and external combustion engines lies in where the power is developed. In an internal combustion engine fuel is ignited and burned inside the same container where the power is developed while in an external combustion engine the fuel is ignited outside the engine and the resulting power sent to it.
In a four-stroke piston cycle, one piston is always:
delivering power |
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all of these are correct |
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compressing the air-fuel mixture |
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exhausting gases |
In a four-stroke cycle engine there is always one piston delivering power, one exhausting gases, one drawing in the air-fuel mixture, and one compressing that mixture.
Too much fuel results in a __________ air-fuel mixture that burns quicker and cooler.
light |
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heavy |
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rich |
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lean |
The stoichiometric ratio defines the proper ratio of air to fuel necessary so that an engine burns all fuel with no excess air. For gasoline fuel, the stoichiometric ratio is about 14.7:1 or for every one gram of fuel, 14.7 grams of air are required. Too much air results in a lean air-fuel mixture that burns more slowly and hotter while too much fuel results in a rich mixture that burns quicker and cooler.