four-stroke engine
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- An internal combustion engine that completes its power cycle in four distinct piston strokes (intake, compression, power, and exhaust) within a single thermodynamic cycle. It is the most common type of engine found in cars, motorcycles, and many other vehicles.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- Most modern cars are powered by a four-stroke engine.
- The efficiency of a four-stroke engine is generally higher than that of a two-stroke design.
- He is learning how the valves operate in a four-stroke engine.
Advanced Usage
- "four-stroke cycle": The sequence of operations (intake, compression, power, exhaust) that defines the engine's function.
- Understanding the four-stroke cycle is fundamental to automotive mechanics.
- "four-stroke principle": The underlying thermodynamic and mechanical theory of the engine's operation.
- The four-stroke principle was patented by Nikolaus Otto in 1876.
Variants and Related Words
- Four-stroke (adjective): Describing something related to or operating on this principle.
- Four-stroke motorcycles require specific oil.
- Four-cycle engine (noun): A synonymous term, commonly used in American English.
- Otto cycle engine (noun): A technical synonym named after its inventor, Nikolaus Otto.
Synonyms
- Four-cycle engine
- Otto engine
Antonyms
- Two-stroke engine (an internal combustion engine that completes a power cycle with two piston strokes).
Noun
- an internal-combustion engine in which an explosive mixture is drawn into the cylinder on the first stroke and is compressed and ignited on the second stroke; work is done on the third stroke and the products of combustion are exhausted on the fourth stroke