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Lasers To Replace Sparkplugs In Engines?

An anonymous reader writes "For more than 150 years, spark plugs have powered internal combustion engines. Automakers are now getting close to being able to replace this long-standing technology with laser igniters, which should enable cleaner, more efficient, and more economical vehicles. Price and size have been issues holding up such an advance, but a Japanese team is set to announce they've overcome those hurdles."

4 of 351 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Keeping the emitter clean... by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 5, Informative

    According to the article, one of the main reasons spark plugs get gummed up is the electrical sparks they are putting out. Electric arcs tend to corrode their endpoints. With a laser, this isn't a problem. Also, the lasers aren't going to try to ignite combustion right in front of them: It's more efficient to ignite it away from them, in the center of the cylinder. Spark plugs can't do that at all.

    Plus, of course, any laser capable of igniting a fuel-air mixture reliably in a few nanoseconds can burn through a bit of soot on the way.

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  2. Re:Keeping the emitter clean... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Diesel engines don't have spark plugs.

  3. Re:But how... by GaryOlson · · Score: 5, Funny

    Shark injectors, obviously.

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  4. NASCAR? Not likely this century by name_already_taken · · Score: 5, Informative

    The reason why this is so novel is not the power of the laser, but it's size, timing and durability. It'll be interesting to see if NASCAR allows it, as efficiency is a big part of winning that closely regulated league.

    Ummm... The mass-market car manufacturers abandoned carburetors for fuel injection back in 1987, yet NASCAR is still just thinking about using fuel injection maybe in 2012.

    I think you can safely forget about laser ignition systems in NASCAR for a good long time after they're available in regular production cars. While NASCAR cars have been refined over the decades, they are still not using very much technology that would have been unfamiliar to a regular car mechanic in the late 1970s.

    Now, if you'd said Formula 1, then that would make sense.

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