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Wankel engine
(redirected from Wankel engines)

   Also found in: Encyclopedia 0.03 sec.
Wan·kel engine  (vängkl, wäng-, wng-)
n.
A rotary internal-combustion engine in which a triangular rotor turning in a specially shaped housing performs the functions allotted to the pistons of a conventional engine, thereby allowing great savings in weight and moving parts.

[After Felix Wankel (1902-1988), German engineer.]

Wankel engine [ˈwæŋkəl]
n
(Engineering / Automotive Engineering) a type of four-stroke internal-combustion engine without reciprocating parts. It consists of one or more approximately elliptical combustion chambers within which a curved triangular-shaped piston rotates, by the explosion of compressed gas, dividing the combustion chamber into three gastight sections
[named after Felix Wankel (1902-88), German engineer who invented it]
ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.Wankel engine - a rotary engine that is a four-stroke internal-combustion engine without reciprocating partsWankel engine - a rotary engine that is a four-stroke internal-combustion engine without reciprocating parts
rotary engine - an internal-combustion engine in which power is transmitted directly to rotating components


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Mazda has developed Wankel engines that burn hydrogen.
Other chapters look at Wankel engines and the Atkinson, Lenoir, Wicks, and Rallis cycles.
 
 
 
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