enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Modular Engine Management System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modular_Engine_Management...

    The Modular Engine Management System, or MEMS, is an electronic control system used on engines in passenger cars built by Rover Group in the 1990s. As its name implies, it was adaptable for a variety of engine management demands, including electronically controlled carburetion as well as single- and multi-point fuel injection (both with and without electronic ignition control).

  3. Automotive engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_engine

    The startup time for a steam car may take up to 45 minutes, defeating the purpose of faster transportation. By the time the steam automobile was improved, the complexity of manufacturing relative to the gas automobiles made steam automobiles unprofitable. [5] A steam engine is a device which transforms heat into mechanical motion.

  4. Powertrain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Powertrain

    Powertrains can vary significantly between conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles, hybrid vehicles (HEVs), and electric vehicles (EVs). Regardless of the type, the powertrain remains one of the most critical systems in any vehicle. * Engine: The engine is the heart of the powertrain in conventional ICE vehicles. It converts fuel ...

  5. Automotive electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_electronics

    The earliest electronic systems available as factory installations were vacuum tube car radios, starting in the early 1930s.The development of semiconductors after World War II greatly expanded the use of electronics in automobiles, with solid-state diodes making the automotive alternator the standard after about 1960, and the first transistorized ignition systems appearing in 1963.

  6. Naturally aspirated engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturally_aspirated_engine

    Typical airflow in a four-stroke engine: In stroke #1, the pistons suck in (aspirate) air to the combustion chamber through the opened inlet valve.. A naturally aspirated engine, also known as a normally aspirated engine, and abbreviated to N/A or NA, is an internal combustion engine in which air intake depends solely on atmospheric pressure and does not have forced induction through a ...

  7. Mercedes-Benz OM608 engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes-Benz_OM608_engine

    It features common rail direct injection with 2 valves per cylinder, and a cast iron engine block and crankcase with an aluminium alloy cylinder head. [3] Differences include the engine control unit (ECU), a stop start engine system, a dual-mass flywheel, and the ancillaries. [4]

  8. Crankcase ventilation system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crankcase_ventilation_system

    A crankcase ventilation system (CVS) removes unwanted gases from the crankcase of an internal combustion engine. The system usually consists of a tube, a one-way valve and a vacuum source (such as the inlet manifold). The unwanted gases, called "blow-by", are gases from the combustion chamber which have leaked past the piston rings. Early ...

  9. Balance shaft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_shaft

    The Lanchester design of balance shaft systems was refined with the Mitsubishi Astron 80, an inline-four car engine introduced in 1975. This engine was the first to locate one balance shaft higher than the other, to counteract the second order rolling couple (i.e. about the crankshaft axis) due to the torque exerted by the inertia caused by ...