If the temperature drops below the dew point, the moisture in the air will condense into water. And water in combustion engines is rarely a good idea. It'll promote corrosion, rust, degrade lubricants etc.
dirty air cooler can b one of the cost ,
No. Most kangaroos are herbivores. They do not scavenge.
I had to 'scavenge' the automotive graveyard for the right hubcap.
in the wild they often scavenge on deer and elk so yes they do scavenge
The noun form of the verb "scavenge" is "scavenging".
They scavenge for them.
Tasmanian devils both hunt and scavenge. Why they scavenge when they are effervescent utters as well is not known, but what is known is that, by cleaning up the environment of carrion (dead animals), the Tasmanian devil performs a very useful function.
Well, that depends on what you mean by scavenger. Does it scavenge alone, or in a pack? Does it it "hunt" scavenge, or "forage" scavenge? You see, all living things scavenge. Even humans, who scavenge for the most inflated chip packet at the shops. So I believe, yes, cheetahs are scavengers, in one form or another. Hope that helps, from PNE.
I believe Badgers do.
Anything they can scavenge.
when the piston moves up in two stroke engine first of all it covers the scavenge ports and then when it moves little bit up then cylinder lube oil is injected between the piston rings. when it further moves and compress the scavenge air and the temperature of the air inside the cylinder increases above the auto ignition temperature of the fuel oil. and before the piston reaches TDC the fuel is injected and hence the combustion begins.
What_do_shrimp_eatThey don't scavenge.