- the
crankcases are
similar to a four-stroke
engine in that they are
solely used for
lubrication purposes. Most four-stroke
engines use a
crankcase that...
- A
crankcase ventilation system (CVS)
removes unwanted gases from the
crankcase of an
internal combustion engine. The
system usually consists of a tube...
- A
crankcase heater is an
electrical component in a
compressor in an air-conditioning system, heat pump system, or
chiller system. The
crankcase heater...
- Look up
crankcase in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. A
crankcase is the
housing for the
crankshaft of an engine.
Crankcase can also mean:
Crankcase (G.I...
-
cross web
supports for
narrower main bearings,
hence the name.
Tunnel crankcases appeared in the 1930s with the
first high-speed
diesel engines. They were...
- ISBNÂ 9780803166325 Walsh, D. and Price, R. "Fuel
dilution in
engine crankcases: a fast
field method for the workshop". spectrosci.com/product/q6000/...
- most
later two-stroke engines, his had a
separate charging cylinder. The
crankcase-scavenged engine,
employing the area
below the
piston as a
charging pump...
- the
cylinder block, to
which a
separate crankcase was attached.
Modern engine blocks typically have the
crankcase integrated with the
cylinder block as...
- fell from favour. It is now
usual practice to use
monobloc cylinders and
crankcases, but a
monobloc head (for a water-cooled
inline engine at least) would...
- out of the
crankcase so that it does not ac****ulate
contaminating the oil and
creating corrosion. In two-stroke
gasoline engines the
crankcase is part of...