A single piston, the powerhouse of the engine, and
work our way outwards. The 4-stroke cycle. When a piston travels to the end of
its range whether up or down that’s a stroke. Car engines use a 4-stroke cycle,
and it goes like this: First, intake. The piston descends, sucking on air fuel mixture
into the cylinder through the intake port with both intake valves open. Next
compression. With all valves closed the piston comes back up, compressing the
fuel and air mixture for more powerful combustion. Then, the power stroke. An
electrical spark ignites the compressed fuel and air mixture, and the resulting
combustion forces the piston to the bottom of the cylinder again. A connecting
rod transfers this power to the crankshaft. Finally, exhaust. A piston comes back
up pushing the spent mixture out through open exhaust valves and the exhaust
port. Connecting multiple pistons for smooth power delivery, pistons take turns
firing. The firing order for this engine is 1-3-4-2. Camshafts with especially
shaped cams push spinning-loaded valves open in turn. Cam gear and a timing
belt or chain links everything to the crankshaft, and it all spins together.
The crankshaft translates piston power out of the engine. It has counterweights
to balance against the pistons for perfectly smooth revolutions. This is what
rpm means. We’re counting the number of full crankshaft revolutions per minute.
The engine block holds the crankshaft and cylinders, and the cylinder head
holds valves, parts etc. A geared flywheel sits at one side of the crankshaft
for connection to a transmission. Its also where the starter connects to the
system. This engine has four cylinders arranged in a single row. But there are
many possible configurations, like six cylinders with three on each side,
angled in a V shape or eight. Despite different design goals, the basic engine
parts are all there. Now let’s look at the other systems that support this
combustion process. Air intake. Air comes in through an air filter and then
into the intake manifold where it mixes with fuel before being sucked into
individual cylinders through intake parts. Fuel. The fuel pump carries gas from
the tank, through a fuel filter, to the engine where fuel injectors emit a
precisely timed sprat of gas into the intake part. Cooling. Engines get very
hot during operation and requires a cooling system. Coolant channels around
cylinders and through the cylinder head carry a special liquid called
anti-freeze to keep temperature within safe operating range. It is called
anti-freeze because it won’t freeze in icy weather. After cooling hot engine
parts, coolants circulate through the radiator. The radiator has a network of
small tubes and fins. Coolant passes through these channels while air pulled in
by the radiator fan flows by the tubes, cooling the hot liquid for
recirculation. A water pump keeps the coolant system flowing and properly
pressurized. The thermostat regulates coolant temperature by either routing
coolant back through the engine or to the radiator for further cooling.
Electrical. The spark plug delivers the electrical spark that ignites the fuel
air mixture for combustion. The metal core is insulated from the out-metal
casing with porcelain. The spark jumps between these conductive surfaces. The
coil pack delivers electrical current to the spark plugs as directed by the Cem
(engine control module). The ECM is a computer that directs many cores engine
functions like spark timings, valve timing, air to fuel ratio etc.
Well defined
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ReplyDeleteGood learning content
ReplyDeletea good read!
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