Wednesday, June 4, 2014

AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERING SHORT NOTE FOR ANY JOB.



AUTOMOBILE ENGINEERING


Internal combustion engines—automotive engines are called internal-combustion(IC) engines because the fuel that runs them is burned internally, or inside the engines. There are two types, Reciprocating means moving up and down, or back and forth. Almost all automotive engines are of the reciprocating type. In these engines, pistons move up and down, or reciprocate, in cylinders. This type of engine is called a piston engine. Rotary engines have rotors that spin, or rotate. The only such engine now used in automobiles is the Wankel engine.

Two kinds of piston engines—there are two kinds of piston engines—spark-ignition and compression-ignition. The differences between the two are:
  • The type of fuel used
  • The way the fuel gets into the engine cylinders,compative
  • The way the fuel is ignited

            The spark-ignition engines use a highly volatile fuel which turns to vapor easily, such as gasoline or gasohol. The fuel is mixed with air before it enters the engine cylinders. The fuel turns into a vapor and mixed with the air to form a combustible air-fuel mixture. This mixture then enters the cylinders and is compressed. Next, an electric spark produced by the ignition system sets fire to, or ignites, the compressed air-fuel mixture.

In the compression-ignition, or diesel engine, the fuel is mixed with the air after the air enters the engine cylinder. Air alone is taken into the cylinders of the diesel engine. The air is then compressed as the piston moves up. The air is compressed so much that its temperature goes up to 1000F or higher. Then the diesel-engine fuel—a light oil—is injected (sprayed) into the engine cylinder. The hot air, or heat of compression, ignites the fuel. This is why the diesel engine is called a compression ignition engine.

Piston rings are of two types and they do two jobs:
  • Form a sliding seal between the piston and the cylinder wall. These are called compression rings.
  • Scrape off most of the oil that is splashed on the wall so that it does not get up into the combustion chamber where it would burn. These are called oil-control ring.

Engine Operation
The complete cycle of events in the engine cylinder requires four piston stroke—intake, compression, power and exhaust. This requires two revolutions of the crankshaft. The four strokes make the engine a four-stroke-cycle engine.
Diesel engine—there is a second way to ignite the fuel—by compression ignition. This is the system used in diesel engines. When air is compressed, it gets very hot. The more it is compressed, the hotter it gets. Temperature increases with increasing pressure. In the diesel engine, the air is compressed to as little as 1/22 of its original volume. This is a compression ratio 22:1.

Difference between spark-ignition-engine and diesel engine are:
  • The diesel engine compresses air alone.
  • The fuel is sprayed into the combustion chamber as the piston nears TDC on the compression stroke.
  • The temperature of the air ignites the fuel.

Rocker arms—there are several different types of rocker arms. Some rocker arms have a means of adjustment. The purpose is to provide a minimum value-tappet clearance, or gap, in the valve train. Valve-tappet clearance should be kept to a minimum to reduce noise and wear from parts hitting together when the values are opened. The clearance should be large enough to assure complete closing of the values.
Purpose of the fuel system
Both the carbureted fuel system and the fuel-injection system have the same job. This is to supply a combustible mixture of air and fuel to the engine. The fuel system must change the properties of air and fuel for different operating conditions. When the engine is cold, for example, the mixture must be rich (have a high proportion of fuel). This is because the fuel does not vaporize readily at low temperatures. Extra fuel must be added to the mixture so that enough will vaporize to form a combustible mixture.

Carburetion—is the mixing of the gasoline fuel with air to get a combustible mixture. The function of the carburetor is to supply a combustible mixture of varying degrees of richness to suit engine operating conditions. The mixture must be rich for starting, acceleration, and high-speed operation. A less rich mixture is desirable at intermediate speed with a warm engine. The carburetor has several systems through which air-fuel mixture flows during different operating conditions. These systems produce the varying mixtures required for the different operating conditions.

Anti-icing—when fuel is sprayed into the air passing through the air form, the fuel evaporates, or turns to vapor. During evaporation, the fuel takes heat from the surrounding air and metal parts. In the carburetor, spraying and evaporation of the fuel “rob” the surrounding air and carburetor of heat. Under certain conditions, the surrounding metal parts are so cooled that moisture in the air condenses and then freezes on the metal parts. The ice can build up sufficiently, if conditions are right, to cause the engine to stall. This is most apt to occur during the warm-up period following the first start-up of the day.

To prevent such icing, many carburetors have a special anti-icing system. During the warm-up period, the manifold heat-control valve sends hot exhaust gases from one exhaust manifold to the other. Part of this hot exhaust gas circulates around the carburetor idle ports and near the throttle-value shaft. This adds enough heat to prevent icing. Another system has coolant passage in the carburetor. A small amount of engine coolant passes through a special manifold in the carburetor throttle body. This adds enough heat to the carburetor to prevent icing.

Purpose of the lubricating system
The engine lubricating system supplies lubricating oil to all engine moving parts.
Purpose of lubricating oil----
  • The oil lubricants moving parts to minimize wear.
  • The oil minimizes power losses in the engine.
  • The oil serves as a cooling agent.
  • The oil helps to cushion the load.
  • The oil helps form a gastight seal between piston rings and cylinder walls.
  • The oil acts as a cleaning agent.

Properties of lubricating oil—viscosity, viscosity index, viscosity number (SAE 10W W means winter), multiple-viscosity oil (SAE 10E-30, this means that the oil is the same as SAE 10W when cold and SAE 30 when hot), resistance to carbon formation and oil oxidation, corrosion and rust inhibitors, foaming resistance, detergent-dispersants, extreme-pressure resistance, improved oil, synthetic oils etc.

Sludge formation—sludge is a thick, creamy, black substance that sometimes forms in the crankcase. It clogs oil screens and oil lines, preventing oil circulation, so the engine can fail from oil starvation.

How sludge forms—water collects in the crankcase in two ways. First, water is formed as the product of combustion. Second, the crankcase ventilating system carries air through the crankcase. The air usually has moisture in it. This moisture condenses on cold engine parts. The black comes from dirt and carbon.

Why sludge formation—if a car is driven for long distance each time it is started, water in the crankcase quickly evaporates. The crankcase ventilating system then removes the water vapor. Therefore, no sludge will form. However, if the engine is operated when cold most of the time, then sludge will form.

Preventing sludge—to prevent sludge, the car must be driven long enough for the engine to heat up and get rid of the water in the crankcase. This means the trips of 12 miles or 19 km or longer in winter.

Purpose of cooling system—is to keep the engine at its most efficient operating temperature at all speeds and under all operating conditions. Cooling system are designed to remove about one-third (30 to 35 percent) of the heat produced in the combustion chamber by the burning of the air-fuel mixture. So, the cooling system includes devices that prevent normal cooling action during engine warm-up.
Two general types of cooling system are used on automobile engines. They are air cooling and liquid cooling. Most automobile engines are liquid-cooled.

Water jackets—are designed to keep the cylinder block and cylinder head cool. The water jackets are open spaces between the outside wall of the cylinder and the inside of the cylinder block and head. The coolant can circulate freely around the engine hot spots. These include the value guides and value seats, and the upper parts of the cylinder walls where the pistons and rings slide up and down.

Radiator—is a heat exchanger that removes heat from coolant passing through it. The radiator holds a large volume of coolant in close contact with a large volume of air so that heat will transfer from the coolant to the air.

Expansion tank—is partly filled with coolant and is connected to the overflow tube from the radiator filler neck. The coolant in the engine expands as the engine heats up. Instead of dropping out the overflow tube into the street and being lost from the cooling system completely, the coolant flows into the expansion tank. When the engine cools, a vacuum is created in the cooling system. The vacuum siphons some of the coolant back into the radiator from the expansion tank.

Thermostat—is placed in the coolant passage between the cylinder head and the top of the radiator. Its purpose is to close off this passage when the engine is cold.

Antifreeze solution—water freezes at 0°C. If water freezes in the engine cooling system, it stops coolant circulation. Some parts of the engine will overheat. This could seriously damage the engine. To prevent freezing of the water in the cooling system, antifreeze is added to form the coolant. The most commonly used antifreeze is ethylene glycerol, although alcohol-base antifreeze has been used in the past. A mixture of half water and half ethylene glycerol will not freeze above -34°F.

Electrical system—the major components of the automobile electrical system are:
  • Starting system—battery, starting motor, wiring, and switches.
  • Charging system—alternator and regulator, with wiring.
  • Ignition system
  • Accessory system—horns, lighting, instrument-panel warning systems.

Sulfation—the active materials in the plates are converted into lead sulfate during discharge. This lead sulfate is reconverted into active material during recharge. However, if the battery stands for long periods in a discharged condition, the lead sulfate is converted into hard, crystalline substance. The substance is difficult to reconvert into active materials by normal charging processes. Such a battery should be charged at half the normal rate for 60 to 100 hours. Even though this long charging period may reconvert the sulfate to active material, the battery may still remain in a damaged condition. The crystalline sulfate, as it forms, tends to break the plate grids.

Purpose of charging system—the charging system has two jobs:
  • To put back into the battery the current used to start the engine.
  • To handle the load of the lights, ignition, radio, and other electrical and electronic equipment while the engine is running.

Purpose of ignition system—supplies high-voltage surges as high as 47000 volts, to the spark plugs in the engine cylinder. These surges produce electric sparks across the spark-plug gaps. The heat from the spark ignites, or sets fire to, the compressed air-fuel mixture in the combustion chambers. When the engine is idling, the spark appears at the plug gap just as the piston nears TDC on the compression stroke. When the engine is operating at higher speeds, or with part throttle, the spark is advanced. It is moved ahead and occurs earlier in the compression stroke. This gives the compressed mixture more time to burn and deliver its energy to the pistons.

Atmospheric pollution—to reduce these pollutants, automotive vehicles is equipped with several emission controls:
  • Positive crankcase ventilation (PCV)
  • Evaporative emission control systems
  • Heated-air systems
  • Exhaust-gas re circulation (EGR)

Purpose of clutch—the clutch is used on cars with transmissions that are shifted by hand. It allows the driver to couple the engine to, or uncouples the engine from, the transmission. The clutch is linked to the clutch pedal in the passenger compartment. When the driver presses down on the clutch pedal, the linkage causes the clutch to disengage. This uncouples the engine from the transmission. When the driver releases the clutch pedal, springs in the clutch cause it to engage again. Now power can flow from the engine, through the clutch, to the transmission and power train.

Synchronizers—to prevent gear clash during shifting while the car is in motion, synchronizing devices are used in automotive transmission. These devices ensure that gears that are about to mesh will be rotating at the same speed, so they will engage smoothly.

Universal joints—the universal joint allows driving power to be carried through two shafts that are at an angle to each other.

Slip joints—has outside splines on one shaft and matching internal splines on a mating hollow shaft.

Front suspension—a system allows the front wheels to move up and down and absorb road shocks. But the system must also allow the front wheels to swing from side to side so the car can be steered. Coil, leaf, and torsion-bar springs are used in seven basic arrangements:

  • Coil spring between lower control arm and a seat in the car frame.
  • Coil spring between the upper control arm and a seat in the car body.
  • Coil spring between an I-beam axle and a seat in the frame.
  • Coil spring between a seat on a strut rod which is attached to the lower control arm and a seat in the car body. There is no upper control arm. This is called McPherson-strut suspension.
  • Torsion bar connected longitudinally between the lower control arm and the car frame.
  • Torsion bar connected transversely between the lower control arm and the car body.
  • Leaf springs between and I-beam axle and a seat in the frame.

Purpose of steering system—allows the driver of guide the car along the road and turn left or right as desired. The system includes the steering wheel, which the driver controls, the steering gear, which changes the rotary motion of the wheel into straight-line motion, and the steering linkages.

Front-end geometry—is the relationship of the angle among the front wheels, the front-wheel attaching parts, and the ground. The various factors that enter into front-end geometry are:
Front-suspension height, Camber, Steering-axis inclination, Caster, Toe, Turning radius

Purpose of tires—a tire has two functions. First, they are air-filled cushions that absorb most of the shocks caused by road irregularities. The tires flex, or give, as they meet these irregularities. Therefore they reduce the effect of the shocks on the passengers in the car. Second, the tires grip the road to provide good traction. Good traction enables the car to accelerate, brake, and make turns without skidding.

Tire size and markings—tire size is marked on the sidewall of the tire. An older tire might be marked 7.75-14. This means that the tire fits on a wheel that is 14 inches [356 mm] in diameter at the rim where the tire bead rests. The 7.75 means the tire itself is about 7.75 inches [197 mm] wide when it is properly inflated.

Tires carry several markings on the sidewall. The markings include a letter code to designate the type of car the tire is designed for. D means a lightweight car. F means intermediate. G means a standard car. H, J and L are for large luxury cars and high-performance vehicles. For example, some cars use a G78-14 tire. The 14 means a rim diameter of 14 inches. The 78 indicates the ratio between the tire height and width. The tire is 78 percent as high as it is wide. The ratio of the height to the width is called the aspect ratio or profile ration. Four aspect ratios are 83, 78, 70, and 60. The lower the number, the wider the tire looks. A 60 tire is only 60 percent as high as it is wide.

IMPORTANT TERMS USED IN I.C. ENGINES

Supercharging—is the process of supplying the intake air to the engine cylinder at a pressure greater than the pressure of the surrounding atmosphere.
Scavenging—is the process of removing the burnt gases in I.C. engines from the combustion chamber of the engine cylinder.
Auto-ignition—is the phenomenon by which a fuel catches fire without external flame. Iso-octane helps to resist auto-ignition and normal heptane accelerates auto-ignition.

Pre-ignition—is the ignition of the charge in spark ignition engine before the spark occurs in the spark plug. Or, pre-ignition is the spontaneous combustion of the mixture before the end of the compression stroke.

Detonation—the rapid auto-ignition of a portion of a fuel causes a pressure wave of high intensity to be set up in the cylinder of an I.C. engine.

Octane number—measures of the resistance of a fuel to combustion knock using standardized engine tests. The research octane number is determined using ASTM Method D 2699; the motor octane number is determined using ASTM Method D 2700. The Antiknock Index is the average of the Research and Motor numbers. Octane numbers are determined using n-heptane that has an octane number of 0, and isooctane that has an octane number of 100.

Cetane number—the ignition quality of a diesel fuel measured using an engine test specified is ASTM method D613. Cetane number is determined using two pure hydrocarbon reference fuel: cetane, which has a cetane rating of 100; and heptamethylnonane (also called isocetane), which has a cetane rating of 15.

Top or Inner Dead Centre—the top most position towards cover end side of the cylinder is known as top dead centre (i.e. T.D.C) or inner dead centre (i.e. I.D.C)

Bottom or Outer Dead Centre—the lowest position of the piston towards the crank end side of the cylinder is known as bottom dead centre (i.e. B.D.C) or outer dead centre (i.e. O.D.C)

Clearance volume—when the piston is at top dead centre there is some volume between the piston and cylinder head. This volume is known as clearance volume which is represented by Vc.

Swept volume—the volume corresponding to the piston displacement from T.D.C (or B.D.C) is known as swept volume.

Stroke—it is the distance traveled by the piston from one of its dead centre position to the other dead centre position.

Compression ratio—is the ratio of the total volume of the cylinder to clearance volume.

A four stroke engine is one which requires four strokes of the piston to complete the cycle or the engine which requires two revolutions of the crank shaft to complete the cycle is known as four stroke engine.

A two stroke engine is one which requires two strokes of the piston or one revolution of the crank shaft to complete the cycle.