Hot tube engine
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The hot tube engine is a primitive and long-obsolete type of combustion engine.[1] Invented before reliable magnetos could be made, they use a separated heat source to ignite their combustion chambers, called a hot-tube ignitor.[1] The hot-tube ignitor has the same function as a spark plug does in a modern, spark-ignited engine.[citation needed]
The timing of a hot tube engine is controlled by means of varying the length of the hot-tube ignitor. Length of the tube controls when the charge ignites, and the ignition timing can be optimized so as to allow different operating speeds to be selected, much like a spark advance control. It was mostly used as a stationary engine on farms but was also found in very early automobiles and motorcycles.[citation needed]
Contrary to the aforementioned hot-bulb engine which only requires a heater to begin combustion but then self-sustains, the flame must be kept on the ignitor tube for the engine to keep working, because the byproduct heat from internal combustion is insufficient to maintain the required temperature for ignition. Modern recreations and restored engines are therefore built to run on propane, as it can easily be used both for the engine itself and for the heater flame.[citation needed]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Mackey, Andrew K. (4 March 2014). "Hot Tube Engine Basics - Gas Engine Magazine". Gas Engine Magazine. Retrieved 2025-03-11.