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Stroke (engine)

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Phase of an engine piston's travel
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In the context of aninternal combustion engine, the termstroke has the following related meanings:

  • A phase of the engine's cycle (e.g. compression stroke, exhaust stroke), during which the piston travels from top to bottom or vice versa.
  • The type of power cycle used by a piston engine (e.g.two-stroke engine,four-stroke engine).
  • "Stroke length", the distance travelled by thepiston during each cycle. The stroke length, along withbore diameter, determines the engine'sdisplacement.

Phases in the power cycle

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The phases/strokes of afour-stroke engine.
1: intake
2: compression
3: power
4: exhaust
Animation of a two-stroke engine

Commonly used engine phases or strokes (i.e. those used in a four-stroke engine) are described below. Other types of engines can have very different phases.

Induction-intake stroke

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The induction stroke is the first phase in a four-stroke (e.g.Otto cycle orDiesel cycle) engine. It involves the downward movement of thepiston, creating a partialvacuum that draws an air-fuel mixture (or air alone, in the case of a direct injection engine) into the combustion chamber. The mixture enters thecylinder through an intakevalve at the top of the cylinder.

Compression stroke

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See also:Compression ratio

The compression stroke is the second of the four stages in a four-stroke engine.

In this stage, the air-fuel mixture (or air alone, in the case of a direct injection engine) iscompressed to the top of the cylinder by the piston. This is the result of the piston moving upwards, reducing the volume of the chamber. Towards the end of this phase, the mixture is ignited, by aspark plug for petrol engines or by self-ignition for diesel engines.

Combustion-power-expansion stroke

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The combustion stroke is the third phase, where the ignited air-fuel mixture expands and pushes the piston downwards. Theforce created by this expansion is what creates an engine's power.

Exhaust stroke

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The exhaust stroke is the final phase in a four stroke engine. In this phase, the piston moves upwards, squeezing out the gasses that were created during the combustion stroke. The gasses exit the cylinder through an exhaust valve at the top of the cylinder. At the end of this phase, the exhaust valve closes and the intake valve opens, which then closes to allow a fresh air-fuel mixture into the cylinder so the process can repeat itself.

Types of power cycles

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Thethermodynamic cycle used by a piston engine is often described by the number of strokes to complete a cycle. The most common designs for engines are two-stroke and four-stroke. Less common designs include one-stroke engines,five-stroke engines,six-stroke engines andtwo-and-four stroke engines.

One-stroke engine

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A Granada, Spain-based company, INNengine invented an opposed-piston engine with four pistons on either side to make a total of eight. Fixed rods hold together all pistons, and they share one combustion chamber. These rods press against plates that have an oscillating wave-like design, allowing the rods to press and release the pistons in a synchronized, smooth process. The engine, known as the e-REX creates 4 times more power events per revolution than a conventional 4 Stroke and twice more than a 2 Stroke.[1] Although the e-REX is called a one-stroke engine there is debate that says it is actually a two-stroke engine, it is called a one-stroke because each piston executes two strokes (i.e., compression/combustion and exhaust/intake) in half an engine revolution, then by INNengine's logic, two strokes multiplied by half a revolution is what gave it the Patented 1 Stroke name.[2]

Two-stroke engine

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Two-stroke engines complete a power cycle every two strokes, which means a power cycle is completed with every crankshaft revolution. Two-stroke engines are commonly used in (typically large) marine engines, outdoor power tools (e.g. lawnmowers and chainsaws) and motorcycles.[3]

Four-stroke engine

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Four-stroke engines complete a power cycle every four strokes, which means a power cycle is completed every two crankshaft revolutions. Most automotive engines are of a four-stroke design.[3]

Five-stroke engine

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Five-stroke engines complete a power cycle every five strokes. The engine only exists as a prototype.

Six-stroke engine

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Six-stroke engines complete a power cycle every six strokes, which means a power cycle is completed every three crankshaft revolutions.

Stroke length

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The stroke length is how far the piston travels in the cylinder, which is determined by thecranks on thecrankshaft.

Engine displacement is calculated by multiplying the cross-section area of the cylinder (determined by thebore) by the stroke length. This number is multiplied by the number of cylinders in the engine, to determine the total displacement.

Steam engine

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The termstroke can also apply to movement of the piston in alocomotive cylinder.

Part of theAutomobile series
Engine block and
rotating assembly
Valvetrain and
Cylinder head
Forced induction
Fuel system
Ignition
Engine management
Electrical system
Intake system
Exhaust system
Cooling system
Lubrication
Other
Operating cycle
Valves
Valves
Valve gear
Mechanisms
Boilers
Simple boilers
Fire-tube boilers
Water-tube boilers
Boiler feed
Cylinder
Condenser
Other
History
Precursors
Newcomen engine
Watt engine
Beam
Rotative beam
High-pressure
Compound
Murray
High-speed
See also

References

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  1. ^"Our Technology – INNengine".
  2. ^"INNengine "one-stroke" waves away conventional engine design".New Atlas. July 12, 2023.
  3. ^abDempsey, Paul (29 September 2009).Two-Stroke Engine Repair and Maintenance. United States: McGraw-Hill Education. pp. 20–34.ISBN 9780071625401.
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