| Your Results | Global Average | |
|---|---|---|
| Questions | 5 | 5 |
| Correct | 0 | 3.13 |
| Score | 0% | 63% |
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.
Which of the following is a relay that connects the battery to the starter motor when the ignition key is turned?
solenoid |
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alternator |
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actuator |
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ignition coil |
The cylindrical solenoid is a relay that safely connects the high amperage battery to the starter motor when the ignition key is turned. This current then allows the engine to turn at a high enough speed to start.
The spark plug fires during which engine stoke?
compression |
|
intake |
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power |
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exhaust |
During the power stroke, just before the piston reaches top dead center, the spark plug fires and ignites the compressed air-fuel mixture. The resulting expansion due to combustion pushes the piston back down the cylinder toward bottom dead center.
What's the name of the high-voltage winding in the ignition coil?
secondary coil winding |
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battery coil winding |
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initial coil winding |
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primary coil winding |
The ignition coil is a high-voltage transformer made up of two coils of wire. The primary coil winding is the low-voltage winding and has relatively few turns of heavy wire. The secondary coil winding is the high-voltage winding that surrounds the primary and is made up of thousands of turns of fine wire. Current flows from the battery through the primary coil winding which creates a changing magnetic field inside the secondary coil. This induces a very high-voltage current in the secondary coil which it feeds to the distributor.
Ignition timing is measured in number of degrees:
before bottom dead center |
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after bottom dead center |
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before top dead center |
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after top dead center |
Ignition timing defines the point in time at the end of the compression stroke that the spark plug fires. Measured in number of degrees before top dead center (BTDC), the exact point that the spark plugs initiate combustion varies depending on the speed of the engine. The timing is advanced (the spark plugs fire a few more degrees BTDC) when the engine is running faster and retarded when it's running slower.