What are the reasons for diesel entering the engine block of a diesel engine?
1 Answers
The reasons for diesel entering the engine block of a diesel engine are: 1. Damaged fuel injector; 2. Poor atomization of the fuel injector; 3. Excessive clearance between piston rings and cylinder walls. The working principle of a diesel engine is: to generate high heat by compressing air, atomizing and injecting diesel through the engine's fuel injector, creating an explosive expansion effect inside the engine to push the piston to work. Diesel engines are divided into: 1. Spark-ignition engines: Gasoline engines inject gasoline into the intake pipe, mixing it with air to form a combustible mixture that enters the cylinder, where it is ignited by a spark plug to burn and expand, performing work; 2. Compression-ignition engines: Diesel engines inject diesel directly into the engine cylinder through a fuel injection pump and injector, where it mixes uniformly with the compressed air in the cylinder, spontaneously igniting under high temperature and pressure to push the piston to perform work.