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Custom-car.us is all about
engine tuning and car performance; so if you want to know about
car tuning,
how to increase engine power and
how to modify your car, then you've come to the right place. However, before we can start talking about engine tuning and increasing engine power and torque, we first need to have a basic understanding of
how an internal combustion engine produces power. Therefore, over the next few pages of this section, we'll discuss the various
basic concepts and principles of the internal combustion engines and the common terms used to discuss engine modifications, such as
volumetric efficiency, engine displacement and
air density as all of these influence engine power and performance. We also have a
glossary of car modification terms that you can check for the meaning of some of the terms we use on this site. Once we have a clear understanding of how a four stroke engine produces power, we can move on and start make our
P.L.A.N.s to increase engine performance.
Although there are two types of internal combustion engines, namely the
two stroke engine and the
four stroke engine, we're only interested in car performance and since the two-stroke engine is not used on cars, we won't be discussing that engine here. Instead we'll focus out attentions soely on the four-stroke engine because custom-car.us is all about
car tuning and because cars use the four-stroke engine and not the two-stoke engine. If you're looking for information about the two-stroke engine, you could try
How Stuff Works or Wikipedia.
The Wankel rotary engine.
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There are also
numerous derivatives of the four stroke engine – diesel engines, petrol engines, four cylinder engines, straight sixes, boxer engines, rotary or wankel engines, turbocharged engines, supercharged engines, etc. With the marked exception of the
rotary engine, all four stroke engines have a
common basic design – they all consist of individual cylinders with pistons that are connected to a flywheel by a crankshaft, and they all make use of what is known as the
Otto Cycle. This makes it fairly easy to discuss
basic engine power concepts as we don't need to concern ourselves with V's and straights, boxers and horizontally opposed engines. Instead our discussion can and will be all about the four stroke internal combustion engine. In addition, the deisle engine has had a resurgence in recent years and has become more of a performance engine, especially the turbo-diesel engine. A lot of what we discuss here can be applied to modern diesel engines but there are some aspects of engine modification that are specific to diesel engines; for this reason we'll discuss
diesel engines and
diesel engine modifications on their own.
So let us begin by looking at the four strokes of the
four stroke internal combustion engine otherwise known as the
Otto cycle. You can skip this section if you're already familiar with the Otto cycle and head on over to
basic engine power or
engine building, but this section does tie into most of what we discuss on Custom-car.us. If you're intereseted in modifying diesel engines, hop on over to our page on
diesel engines to find out how to apply our discussions to diesel engines.