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Question by alex
Submitted on 1/15/2004
Related FAQ: Gasoline FAQ - Part 4 of 4
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How can gasoline make car move

 
 

Answer by timothy  schupp
Submitted on 2/19/2004
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when a car stars to turn over it will pump gas from the tank into the carburator and then fron there the gas will go to and thuroght the head  into the pistions and the spark plug will make it burn and that creats pressuer and the pistions will start to go up and down the  crank shaft will move and start to spin and from there the belts and the transmission will turn the wlhees.

 

Answer by Zeratul001
Submitted on 3/4/2004
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no awnser

 

Answer by Lenny
Submitted on 5/3/2004
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It just goes!!!!

 

Answer by scratch& sniff
Submitted on 5/7/2004
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whats crack best buddy? answer:       scratch& sniff

 

Answer by Orpanyd
Submitted on 5/20/2004
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In the ignition cycle, the gasoline is mixed with air and it is then compressed and then it explodes inside the motor when the spark plug sparks and therefore moving the motor's parts (pushes the piston down in a piston engine) and causing the motor to turn, the inertia momentum allows the motor to continue turning until it goes through a maintenance cycle where it expels the exhaust and feeds in another fuel and air mixture and then it goes to another ignition cycle and then the phenomenon occurs again.

 

Answer by John Connor
Submitted on 6/23/2004
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If you want to understand how a engines work , www.howstuffworks.com has a really good write up on the internal combustion engine as well as a few of the varieties of the internal combustion engine like the rotary engine, diesel engine, etc.

Just deal with the pop-ups if you don't use an alternate web browser to IE.

 

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