Definition
Tube-shaped enclosed spaces inside an aircraft reciprocating engine where the fuel-air mixture is ignited and burned. In a typical piston engine, each cylinder forms one combustion chamber, with the piston sealing the bottom and the cylinder head sealing the top. The burning mixture expands inside this chamber and pushes the piston down, producing the power that turns the propeller.
Plain English
The round, tube-shaped spaces inside an engine where fuel and air burn to make power. Each one is closed off at the top by the engine head and at the bottom by a moving piston that gets pushed down when the mixture ignites.
Context Anchor
Seen when studying how a reciprocating aircraft engine turns fuel, air, and a spark into power.
Derivation
‘Cylindrical’ comes from the Greek kylindros, meaning a roller or tube-shaped object. ‘Combustion’ comes from the Latin combustio, meaning ‘burning up.’ Put together, the phrase simply means ‘tube-shaped burning spaces’ — which is exactly what they are.
Why Pilots Care
The condition of these chambers directly affects engine power, smoothness, and reliability. Worn cylinders, fouled spark plugs, or detonation inside the combustion chambers can cause rough running or power loss — issues a pilot may detect during runup or in flight.
Grounding Statement
Picture each cylinder as having a small round space where the fuel and air are squeezed, lit, and turned into a push on the piston.
Intuition Check
Do not think of these as separate rooms added onto the engine. Here, chambers means the enclosed spaces inside the cylinders where the burning takes place.
Example Sentence 1
Most light aircraft engines use cylindrical combustion chambers arranged horizontally opposed, with two, four, or six cylinders firing in sequence.
Example Sentence 2
During preflight, pilots check for any signs of damage to the cylindrical combustion chambers through the exhaust analysis.