![]() An external combustion engine EC engine is a heat engine where an internal working fluid is heated by combustion of an external source, through the engine wall or a heat exchanger. The fluid then, by expanding and acting on the mechanism of the engine produces motion and usable work. |
![]() Middle English engin, from Anglo-French, from Latin ingenium natural disposition, talent, from in- gignere to beget - more at kin. Learn More About engine. Post the Definition of engine to Facebook Share the Definition of engine on Twitter Time Traveler for engine. |
![]() These are words often used in combination with engine. Click on a collocation to see more examples of it. The situation is analogous to automobile engine design: one of the desiderata for an engine is that it should be fuelefficient. |
![]() A miniature railway engine. From Middle English engyn, from Anglo-Norman engine, Old French engin skill, cleverness, war machine, from Latin ingenium innate or natural quality, nature, genius, a genius, an invention, in Late Latin a war-engine, battering-ram, from ingenitum, past participle of ingignō to instil by birth, implant, produce in. |
![]() The steam engine in old-fashioned trains and steam boats is the best example of an external combustion engine. The fuel coal, wood, oil in a steam engine burns outside the engine to create steam, and the steam creates motion inside the engine. |
![]() The engine block contains the cylinders. In engines with more than one cylinder they are usually arranged either in 1 row straight engine or 2 rows boxer engine or V engine 3 rows are occasionally used W engine in contemporary engines, and other engine configurations are possible and have been used. |