Comparison of SI and CI Engine
Comparison of S.I. and C.I. engines is made from various aspects is made below:
Fuel economy
The chief  comparison to be made between the two types of engine is how effectively  each engine can convert the liquid fuel into work energy. Different  engines are compared by their thermal efficiencies. Thermal efficiency  is the ratio of the useful work produced to the total energy supplied.  Petrol engines can have thermal efficiencies ranging between 20% and  30%. The corresponding diesel engines generally have improved  efficiencies, between 30% and 40%. Both sets of efficiency values are  considerably influenced by the chosen compression-ratio and design.        
Power and torque
The  petrol engine is usually designed with a shorter stroke and operates  over a much larger crankshaft-speed range than the diesel engine. This  enables more power to be developed towards the upper speed range in the  petrol engine, which is necessary for high road speeds; however, a  long-stroke diesel engine has improved pulling torque over a relatively  narrow speed range, this being essential for the haulage of heavy  commercial vehicles.       
At the time of writing, there was a trend to  incorporate diesel engines into cars. This new generation of engines has  different design parameters and therefore does not conform to the above  observations.       
Reliability
  Due to  their particular process of combustion, diesel engines are built  sturdier, tend to run cooler, and have only half the speed range of most  petrol engines. These factors make the diesel engine more reliable and  considerably extend engine life relative to the petrol engine.       
Pollution
  Diesel  engines tend to become noisy and to vibrate on their mountings as the  operating load is reduced. The combustion process is quieter in the  petrol engine and it runs smoother than the diesel engine. There is no  noisy injection equipment used on the petrol engine, unlike that  necessary on the diesel engine.        The products of combustion coming out of the exhaust system are  more noticeable with diesel engines, particularly if any of the  injection equipment components are out of tune. It is questionable which  are the more harmful: the relatively invisible exhaust gases from the  petrol engine, which include nitrogen dioxide, or the visible smoky  diesel exhaust gases.       
Safety
Unlike petrol,  diesel fuels are not flammable at normal operating temperature, so they  are not a handling hazard and fire risks due to accidents are minimized.        
Cost
Due to their heavy construction and injection equipment, diesel engines are more expensive than petrol engines.


 
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