(Askeri) İÇTEN YANMALI MOTOR, İÇ PATLARLI MOTOR (ULŞ.): Benzin motoru (gasoline engine) ve dizel motoru (diesel motor) gibi kapalı bir silindir veya hücre içinde ateşlenen yakıtın genişleyici kuvvetinden güç istihsal etmek suretiyle çalışan motor
A heat engine in which intermittent or the continuous burning of a fuel takes place inside a combustion chamber; the resulting pressurized gas acts directly on the engine to do useful work, such as a piston engine, gas turbine, jet engine or rocket
An internal combustion engine is an engine that creates its energy by burning fuel inside itself. Most cars have internal combustion engines. an engine that produces power by burning petrol, used in most cars
(Otomotiv) An engine that works on power released by vapourized fuel and air burning inside the engine itself, rather than on an outside source of combustion as, for example, a steam engine does
a heat engine in which combustion occurs inside the engine rather than in a separate furnace; heat expands a gas that either moves a piston or turns a gas turbine
Any engine in which a fuel-air mixture is burned in the engine proper so that the hot gaseous products of combustion act directly on the surfaces of its moving parts, such as those of pistons (see piston and cylinder) or turbine rotor blades. Internal-combustion engines include gasoline engines, diesel engines, gas turbine engines, pure jet engines, and rocket engines and motors, and are one class of heat engines. They are commonly divided into continuous-combustion engines and intermittent-combustion engines. In the first type (e.g., jet engines) fuel and air flow steadily into the engine, where a stable flame is maintained for continuous combustion. In the second (e.g., gasoline-reciprocating-piston engines), discrete quantities of fuel and air are periodically ignited. See also automobile industry, machine, steam engine