Mono stroke

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Mono stroke is the four cycles of a fuel in one stroke of a piston. Intake is the first fuel cycle. Compression is the second fuel cycle. Ignition is the third fuel cycle. Exhaust is the fourth fuel cycle.

Russell Bourke is the first known creator of a mono stroke four cycle co-operative twin diesel or Bourke Cycle Engine. Russell Bourke saw in the 1920s that the teachers did not know the difference between a stroke and a cycle. See http://www.RogerRichard.com 's http://www.BourkeEngine.com as a mordern working example. This engine design is so very hard to copy because it has certain requirements that need to be understood and known. Many fuels had to be remixed 25%/75% or 75%/25%, whatever was that particular fuel's problem, to be able to achieve the chemical requirements of hydrogen detonation.