What Causes a Gasoline Engine to Stall When the Choke is Applied?
1 Answers
Gasoline engines stall when the choke is applied primarily due to excessive carbon buildup in the engine. Below is an introduction to relevant engine information: Energy Conversion: An engine is a machine capable of converting other forms of energy into mechanical energy, including internal combustion engines (reciprocating piston engines), external combustion engines (Stirling engines, steam engines, etc.), jet engines, electric motors, etc. For example, internal combustion engines typically convert chemical energy into mechanical energy. Device: Engines can refer to both power generation devices and the entire machine including the power unit (e.g., gasoline engines, aircraft engines). The engine was first developed in the UK, so the concept of the engine also originates from English, with its original meaning referring to "a mechanical device that generates power."