Firing order

Firing order

The firing order is the sequence of power delivery of each cylinder in a multi-cylinder reciprocating engine. This is achieved by sparking of the spark plugs in a gasoline engine in the correct order, or by the sequence of fuel injection in a Diesel engine. When designing an engine, choosing an appropriate firing order is critical to minimizing vibration and achieving smooth running, for long engine fatigue life and user comfort, and heavily influences crankshaft design.

[


thumb|250px|right|For_this_inline-4 engine, 1-3-4-2 could be a valid firing order.]

Ignition

In a gasoline engine, the correct firing order is obtained by the correct placement of the spark plug wires on the distributor. In a modern engine with an engine management system and direct ignition, the Engine Control Unit (ECU) takes care of the correct firing sequence. Especially on cars with distributors, the firing order is usually cast on engine somewhere, most often on the cylinder head, the intake manifold or the valve cover(s).

Various firing orders for different engine layouts

Cylinder numbering and firing order

Notes on left/right and front/rear

When referring to cars, the left hand side of the car is the side that corresponds with the driver's left, as seen from the driver's seat. It can also be thought of as the side that would be on the left if one was standing directly behind the car looking at it.

When referring to engines, the front of the engine is the part where the pulleys for the accessories (such as the alternator and water pump) are, and the rear of the engine connects to the transmission. The front of the engine may point towards the front, side or rear of the car. In most rear wheel drive cars, the engine is longitudinally mounted and the front of the engine also points to the front of the car. In front wheel drive cars with a transverse engine, the front of the engine usually points towards the righthand side of the car. One notable exception is Honda, where many models have the front of the engine at the left hand side of the car.

In front wheel drive cars with longitudinally mounted engines, most often the front of the engine will point towards the front of the car, but some manufacturers (Saab, Citroën, Renault) have at times placed the engine 'backwards', with #1 towards the firewall. One notable car with this layout is the Citroën Traction Avant. This layout is uncommon today. "See also: Automobile layout"

Cylinder numbering and firing orders for various engine layouts

In a straight engine the spark plugs (and cylinders) are numbered, starting with #1, usually from the front of the engine to the rear.

[
radial engine.] In a radial engine the cylinders are numbered around the circle, with the #1 cylinder at the top. There are almost always an odd number of cylinders, as this allows for a constant every-other-piston firing order: for example, with a single bank of 7 cylinders, the order would be 1-3-5-7-2-4-6.

In a V engine, cylinder numbering varies among manufacturers. Generally speaking, the most forward cylinder is numbered 1, but some manufacturers will then continue numbering along that bank first (so that side of the engine would be 1-2-3-4, and the opposite bank would be 5-6-7-8) while others will number the cylinders from front to back along the crankshaft, so one bank would be 1-3-5-7 and the other bank would be 2-4-6-8. (In this example, a V8 is assumed). To further complicate matters, manufacturers may not have used the same system for all of their engines. It is important to check the numbering system used before comparing firing orders, because the order will vary significantly with crankshaft design (see crossplane).

As an example, the well-known Chevrolet Small-Block engine has cylinders 1-3-5-7 on the left hand side of the car, and 2-4-6-8 on the other side, and uses a firing order of 1-8-4-3-6-5-7-2. Note that the order alternates irregularly between the left and right banks; this is what causes the famous 'burbling' sound of this type of engine. [http://boxwrench.net/specs_index.htm]

In most Audi and Ford V8 engines cylinders 1-2-3-4 are on the right hand side of the car, with 5-6-7-8 are on the left.

This means that GM LS V8 engines and Ford Modular V8s have an identical firing pattern despite having a different firing order.

An interesting exception is the Ford Flathead V8 where the number 1 cylinder is on the right front of the engine(same as other Ford V8's) but this cylinder is NOT the front cylinder of the engine! In this case number 5 is the front cylinder. A similar situation exists with the Pontiac V8's 455 etc where the cylinders are numbered like a Chevrolet V8 but the right side bank is in front(like a Ford), this puts cylinder number 2 in front of number 1.

hips

Contrary to most car engines, a ship's engine or a power plant engine is numbered from the flywheel end towards the free end.

In ship and power plant V-type engines the numbering is A1... and B1... where the A-bank is on the left hand side and the B-bank is on the right hand side, looking from the flywheel end.

Trivia

* The neon lights on "Flo's V8 Cafe" in the movie Cars flash in the proper firing order for a Ford flathead V8.

ee also

*Two stroke cycle
*Four stroke cycle
*Engine configuration

External links

* [http://boxwrench.net/specs_index.htm Firing Orders, Cylinder Numbering and Distributor Rotation for American V8 engines]


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