¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Igniters
1. igniter [n] - See also: igniter
Lexicographical Neighbors of Igniters
Literary usage of Igniters
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Electric Ignition for Combustion Motors by Forrest Robert Jones (1912)
"Little or no current would flow through the igniters, and there would be no
ignition in consequence. A similar, but less severe, action would occur if the ..."
2. Gas and Oil Engines and Gas-producers: A Treatise on Theoretical and by Lionel Simeon Marks, Horatio Sprague McDewell (1919)
"Effect of Two or More igniters. It is necessary, in a large gas engine, ...
The combustion starts at the igniters, and spreads with a moderate velocity. ..."
3. Gas Engine Ignition: Prepared in the Extension Division of the University of by Earle Bertram Norris, Robert L. Winning, William C. Weaver (1916)
"Because of the large sizes of these engines, two of these igniters are used ...
The two igniters for one combustion chamber are connected in parallel with ..."
4. Audels Gas Engine Manual: A Practical Treatise Relating to the Theory and (1908)
"IGNITION AND igniters. 155. Methods of Ignition. The charge in the cylinder of
an internal combustion engine may be ignited by any one of the four following ..."
5. Gas and Oil Engine Management; a Practical Guide for Users and Attendants by Manfred Powis Bale (1903)
"... electric igniters—Failures of electric ignition— Oil engine governing—Cylinder
lubrication of oil engines —Bumping in cylinder, etc. ..."
6. Power and Power Transmission by Eugene Wycliffe Kerr (1902)
"igniters. There are four ways of igniting the charge in a gas-engine: 1.
Ignition by means of a naked flame as in the Otto engine, Fig. 221. 2. ..."
7. Explosives: A Synoptic and Critical Treatment of the Literature of the by Heinrich Brunswig (1912)
"This is due mainly to the complicated structure of the plant fibers from which
it is made. 2. igniters, FUSES AND DETONATORS. ..."