intake, compression, combusion, and exhaust
1.The first stroke that is intake is the movement of a valve , which opens into the cylinder which contains a moving piston which moves 50 times a second , the opening of the valve lets the fuel to get into the cylinder (the fuel is the mixture of air and fuel that can be diesel or petrol the air is mixed into it to make more compression as the air is more compressible
2. The second stroke is compression that is done by a piston in the cylinder by moving up thus high amount of pressure and temprature.
3. The third stroke is the power or the bang stroke which is done when the piston colides with the top dead centre it ignites due to compression and high temprature which leads to friction
4. The last stroke is the exaust stroke whic is the opening of the second valve and outgoing of ethe waste air
A two stroke engine combines the four strokes of a typical internal combustion engine into two strokes instead of four.
Four stroke engines are quieter than two strokes, but have less power.
2 stroke means it takes two strokes for a power stroke and 4 sroke takes four strokes for power stroke so in otherwise 2 strokes are way faster and more torqey
The four strokes are... Intake, Compression, Combustion, Exhaust.
intake-compression-combustion-exhaust
In a two-stroke engine, two strokes is one cycle. In a four stroke engine, four strokes is one complete cycle. A stroke is a part of a cycle. Remember that the "up" motion and the "down" motion each count as one stroke.
4 strokes for a four stroke, intake, compression,powewr, exhaust
suction stroke and exhaust strokes are the two strokes involved in 2 stroke engine....
A four stroke engine has 4 strokes per cycle, whereas the two stroke engine has only 2 strokes per cycle. Since the 2 stroke engine has twice as many power strokes as a 4 stroke engine at a given rpm, the 2 stroke is capable of making nearly twice the power of a 4 stroke for a given displacement.
It could be anything. The difference between the two is that in a two-stroke engine the piston goes back and forth (two strokes) for every ignition event (spark plug firing for a gas engine or fuel injection for a Diesel), while it goes back and forth twice (four strokes) for a four stroke engine.
It depends on the type of engine. In a four-stroke engine, there are four strokes - intake, compression, power (combustion), and exhaust - required to complete one full rotation of the crankshaft. In a two-stroke engine, there are two strokes - compression/ignition and exhaust - needed to complete one rotation.
The strokes of a four stroke engine are intake, compression, power, and exhaust. The engine takes in the fuel, compresses it, uses it for power, and then the excess fuel comes out the exhaust.