ENGINES

Steam Engine
Diesel engine
Petrol engine
Rotary engine
 
Engine is a machine that converts energy into mechanical work. An engine may get its energy from any of a number of sources, including fuels, steam, and air or water under pressure.

Reciprocating petrol engines use the chemical energy of burning petrol to push one or more pistons. The motion of the pistons can then be converted into rotary (circular) motion, which can be used to turn the wheels of a car or to do some other kind of work. Petrol engines and steam engines are called heat engines because they convert heat energy into mechanical work. Reciprocating petrol engines are called internal-combustion engines if the gases produced by the combustion (burning) of the fuel push directly against the pistons.

The steam engine is an external-combustion engine. External-combustion engines get their energy from heat that is produced outside the engine. In a piston steam engine, for example, heat generated outside the engine is transferred to water inside a boiler. The heat converts the water to steam, which then pushes the engine's pistons.

In hydraulic engines, water pressure is used to produce mechanical work. The pressure may be created by a pump or by water flowing downward from a level above the engine.

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