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Piston Engines
Learn how piston engines operate CONTENTS
Piston Engines: Basic
Principals
The Four-Stroke Cycle
Carburetors and Fuel
Injectors
Ignition Systems
Piston Engine Controls
Propellers
Engines with Carburetors
Carburetor Ice
Fuel-Injected Engines

RELATED LINKS
Controlling the Engine
Turbine Engines
Knowledge of a few general principles of engine operation helps pilots operate
engines efficiently, extends the operating life of the power plant, and helps avoid
engine failures.

Basic Piston Engine Principles


Reciprocating piston engines are the most common power plants on general aviation aircraft. These engines are virtually
identical to automobile engines, with three important exceptions:

1. Most aircraft engines are air cooled. This approach saves the weight of a radiator and coolant and adds a
measure of safety. The loss of coolant or a failure of the cooling system in a liquid-cooled engine quickly causes
complete engine failure.
2. Aircraft engines have dual ignition systems, with the energy to create the spark generated by magnetos. A
magneto, turned by the crankshaft, isn't dependent on the aircraft battery. Each cylinder also has two spark
plugs. If one plug or magneto fails, the other provides a spark to burn fuel.
3. Because an aircraft engine operates throughout a wide range of altitudes, the power controls include a manual
mixture control that the pilot uses to maintain the proper air/fuel ratio as the airplane climbs and descends.

The Four-Stroke Cycle


A typical piston engine operates according to a four-stroke cycle.

Intake: The piston moves down in the cylinder, drawing in air and fuel through the open intake valve.

Compression: The intake and exhaust valves in the cylinder close and the piston moves up in the cylinder, compressing
the fuel-air mixture.

Power: As the piston nears the top of the cylinder during the compression stroke, a burst of electricity from the ignition
system generates a spark in the spark plugs. The sparks ignite the air/fuel mixture, which expands rapidly as it burns.
The force of this expansion drives the piston back down in the cylinder. As the piston moves down, it turns the
crankshaft, which turns the propeller.

Exhaust: When the piston reaches the bottom of the cylinder, the exhaust valve opens. The piston then moves back up
in the cylinder, pushing the burned air/fuel mixture out of the cylinder.

Each cylinder cycles through these four strokes in turn, ensuring that at least one piston is always producing power.

Carburetors and Fuel Injectors


Most piston engines used in aircraft have either a carburetor or fuel injection system to deliver fuel and air to the

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cylinders. The carburetor mixes fuel and air before it enters the cylinders. Carburetors are common on smaller engines
because they're relatively inexpensive. Larger engines usually have fuel-injection systems, which squirt fuel directly into
the cylinders, where it mixes with air during the intake stroke.

Ignition Systems
The ignition system provides a spark to ignite the air/fuel mixture in the cylinders of a piston engine. Most modern
aircraft engines use magnetos to generate the spark. Although not as sophisticated as the electronic ignition systems
used in the latest cars, magnetos are useful in aircraft because:

 They produce a hotter spark at high engine speeds than the battery system used in automobiles.
 They do not depend on an external source of energy such as a battery, a generator, or an alternator.

Getting Started
Magnetos generate electricity when they rotate. So, to start the engine, the pilot must engage a battery-powered starter
that rotates the crankshaft. After the magnetos begin rotating, they supply the spark to each cylinder to ignite the
air/fuel mixture and the starter system is disengaged. The battery no longer has any part in the operation of the engine.
If the battery (or master) switch is turned off, the engine continues to run.

Dual Ignition

Most aircraft engines are equipped with a dual ignition system—two magnetos that supply electrical current to two spark
plugs for each cylinder. One magneto system supplies the current to one set of plugs; the second system supplies the
current to the other set of plugs. This is why the ignition switch on the Cessna Skyhawk SP Model 172 (marked as
MAGNETO on some planes) has five positions: OFF, L (left), R (right), BOTH, and START. With the switch in the L or
R position, only one magneto supplies current and only one set of spark plugs fires. With the switch in the BOTH
position, both magnetos supply current and both sets of spark plugs fire.

Advantages of Dual Ignition


Aircraft have dual ignition systems for safety and efficiency.

 If one magneto system fails, the engine can operate on the other system until you can make a safe landing.
 Two spark plugs improve burning and combustion of the mixture, delivering improved performance.

Operating the Ignition System


You should turn the ignition switch to BOTH after starting the engine and leave it on BOTH during flight. Turn it OFF
after shutting down the engine. If you leave the ignition switch on BOTH (or L or R), the engine could fire if the
propeller is moved from outside the airplane—even if the electrical master switch is off.

Before Takeoff Check


To make sure both ignition systems are operating properly, check each system during the engine run-up before takeoff.
The normal procedure is to set the power at about 1700 rpm. Turn the ignition switch from BOTH to R, then back to
BOTH, then to L, and then back to BOTH. You should see a slight drop in rpm each time you switch from BOTH to
either R or L. If both magnetos are functioning normally, the drop should be no more than about 75 rpm.

Shutting Down the Engine


You should not shut down a piston engine by turning the ignition switch to OFF. Instead, move the mixture control to
the idle cutoff position to turn off the fuel supply to the cylinders. After the engine stops, turn the ignition switch to OFF.
This procedure ensures that no fuel remains in the cylinders and that the engine won't start accidentally if someone
turns the prop or if carbon deposits inside the cylinders create hot spots that ignite residual fuel.

Piston Engine Controls


Most modern piston engines have two or three basic controls.

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 A throttle, the control that has the most direct effect on power.
 Propeller control (if the aircraft is equipped with a constant-speed propeller) to adjust the propeller's rotational
speed, measured in revolutions per minute (rpm).
 Mixture control to adjust the air/fuel mixture as the airplane climbs and descends.

Carbureted engines also have carburetor heat to prevent the formation of or to melt carburetor ice. Engines of about
200 horsepower or more usually have cowl flaps to allow the pilot to adjust the amount of cooling air that flows over the
engine. Opening the cowl flaps is especially important during high-power operations such as takeoff and prolonged
climbs.

Propellers
Piston engines are typically connected to a fixed-pitch or a constant-speed propeller.

Fixed-pitch propellers are bolted directly to the crankshaft of the engine and therefore always turn at the same speed
as the engine. A fixed-pitch prop is somewhat like a transmission with only one gear. This configuration makes up for its
lack of efficiency by being very simple to operate. The only gauge that you need to monitor is the tachometer.

A constant-speed propeller has a governor that adjusts the angle of the blades to maintain the rpm you select. This
type of propeller makes much more efficient use of the engine's power. At low speed when maximum power is required
(as during takeoff), you select maximum rpm or "full increase" with the propeller control, and the propeller blades meet
the air at a small angle. During cruise, you adjust the rpm to a lower setting, and the blades take a bigger bite of the air
while turning a lower speed.

Managing the Power


With a fixed-pitch propeller, managing power is simple. Push the throttle in, and rpm (and power) increases. Pull the
throttle out, and rpm decreases. Be aware, however, that as airspeed increases, rpm tends to creep up, too. Monitor the
tachometer carefully during descents at high speed to make sure that the rpm stays within limits.

A constant-speed propeller makes power management a bit more complicated. You must monitor the manifold pressure
gauge, controlled by the throttle, and the tachometer, which shows the propeller rpm. You adjust rpm with the prop
control.

When setting power with a constant-speed propeller, remember these basic rules to avoid overstressing the engine:

To increase power

1. Increase rpm by advancing the propeller control.


2. Increase manifold pressure with the throttle.

To decrease power

1. Reduce manifold pressure with the throttle.


2. Decrease rpm with the propeller control.

Engines with Carburetors


Many aircraft piston engines use carburetors to combine air and fuel to create a combustible mixture that burns in the
cylinders.

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How a Carburetor Works


Outside air flows through an air filter, then into the carburetor. The air flows through a venturi, a narrow throat in the
carburetor. The air accelerates in the venturi and its pressure drops according to Bernoulli's principle. The partial
vacuum forces fuel to flow through a jet into the airstream where it mixes with the flowing air. The air/fuel mixture then
flows into the intake manifold, which routes it to each cylinder.

The Right Ratio


The carburetor mixes air and fuel by weight. Piston engines generally produce maximum power when the air/fuel
mixture is about 15:1.Carburetors are calibrated at sea-level pressure to meter the correct amount of fuel with the
mixture control in the full rich position. As altitude increases, air density decreases. To compensate for this difference,
the pilot uses the mixture control to adjust the air/fuel mixture entering the combustion chamber.

To control the amount of fuel that mixes with the air, most carburetors use a float in a fuel chamber. A needle attached
to the float opens and closes an opening in the fuel line, metering the correct amount of fuel into the carburetor. The
position of the float, controlled by the fuel level in the float chamber, determines when the valve opens and closes.

Running Rich
An air/fuel mixture that is too rich—that is, it contains too much fuel—causes excessive fuel consumption, rough engine
operation, and loss of power. Running an engine too rich also cools the engine, causing below-normal temperatures in
the combustion chambers, which leads to spark plug fouling, among other problems.

Running Lean
Operating with the mixture too lean—too little fuel for the current weight of air—results in rough engine operation,
detonation, overheating, and a loss of power.

Carburetor Ice
Vaporization of fuel and expansion of the air in the carburetor causes sudden cooling of the air/fuel mixture. The
temperature may drop as much as 60 F (15 C) within a fraction of a second. This cooling causes water vapor in the air
to condense, and if the temperature in the carburetor reaches 32 degrees F (0 C) the water freezes inside the carburetor
passages. Even a slight accumulation of this deposit can restrict the flow of air into the carburetor, reducing power.
Carburetor ice may also lead to complete engine failure, particularly when the throttle is partly or fully closed.

Icing Conditions
On dry days, or when the temperature is well below freezing, the moisture in the air generally doesn't cause carburetor
ice. But if the temperature is between 20 F (-7 C) and 70 F (21 C), with visible moisture or high humidity, the pilot
should be constantly on the alert for carburetor ice.

Indications of Carburetor Icing


For airplanes with fixed-pitch propellers, the first indication of carburetor icing is a drop in rpm on the tachometer. For
airplanes with controllable pitch (constant-speed) propellers, the first indication is usually a drop in manifold pressure.
In both cases, the engine may start to run rough. In airplanes with constant-speed propellers, rpm remains constant.

Thawing Out
To prevent carburetor ice from forming and to eliminate ice that forms, carburetors are equipped with heaters. The
carburetor heater preheats the air before it reaches the carburetor. This preheating melts ice or snow entering the
intake, melts ice that forms in the carburetor passages (provided the accumulation is not too great), and keeps the
air/fuel mixture above freezing to prevent formation of carburetor ice.

Using Carburetor Heat


When flying in conditions conducive to carburetor icing, monitor the engine instruments to watch for signs that ice is
forming. If you suspect that carburetor ice is present, apply full carburetor heat immediately. Leave it on full until you're
certain that all the ice has been removed. Applying partial heat or leaving heat on for too short a time may aggravate
the situation.

When you first apply carburetor heat, expect a drop in rpm in airplanes equipped with fixed-pitch propellers; in airplanes
equipped with constant-speed propellers, expect a drop in manifold pressure. If no carburetor ice is present, rpm or

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manifold pressure will remain lower than normal until the carburetor heat is turned off. If carburetor ice is present,
expect a rise in rpm or manifold pressure after the initial drop (often accompanied by intermittent engine roughness).
When you turn carburetor heat off, the rpm or manifold pressure rises above the value before heat was applied. The
engine should also run more smoothly after the ice has melted.

In extreme cases of carburetor icing, after the ice has been removed you may need to apply just enough carburetor
heat to prevent further ice formation.

Carburetor Heat as a Precaution


Whenever the throttle is closed during flight, especially as you prepare to land, the engine cools rapidly and vaporization
of the fuel is less complete than if the engine is warm. If you suspect carburetor icing conditions, apply full carburetor
heat before closing the throttle and leave the heat on.

More Power
Use of carburetor heat tends to reduce the output of the engine and increase the engine's operating temperature.
Therefore, don't use carburetor heat when you need full power (as during takeoff) or during normal engine operation
except to check for the presence or removal of carburetor ice.

Fuel-Injected Engines
Piston engines rated at more than 200 horsepower often use a fuel-injection system rather than a carburetor.

A fuel-injection system squirts fuel directly into the cylinders or just ahead of the intake valve. The fuel then mixes with
air in the cylinders. Because this type of system requires high-pressure pumps, an air/fuel control unit, a fuel distributor,
and discharge nozzles for each cylinder, it's generally more expensive than a carburetor.

As with an engine equipped with a carburetor, the pilot controls the flow of fuel by adjusting the mixture control.

Advantages of Fuel Injection


Fuel injection has several advantages over a carbureted fuel system, which compensate for its greater cost and
complexity.

 No possibility of carburetor ice (although impact ice can block air intakes).
 Better fuel flow.
 Faster throttle response.
 Precise control of mixture.
 Better fuel distribution.
 Easier cold-weather starts.

Disadvantages of Fuel Injection


Fuel injection does have some disadvantages, the most important being:

 Difficulty in starting a hot engine.


 Vapor locks during ground operations on hot days.
 Difficulty restarting an engine that quits as the result of fuel starvation.

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