Ignition in a sentence as a noun

When the ignition is off, we consume less than 1 mA. By itself, the Automatic Link would take 3-4 years to drain even a cheap battery.

I mean it physically disconnects power to the ignition.

It is hypergolic with every known fuel, and so rapidly hypergolic that no ignition delay has ever been measured.

To say nothing of the recent high profile cases of large auto makers having faulty engine control software or mechanically unsound ignition systems.

Sheep are a tremendous source of methane [1], I think we should patent a device which collects the methane and includes an ignition system that is triggered by metabolic symptoms of fear or distress.

When the device detects sheep panic, it turns an exit nozzle for the tank toward the direction the sheep is looking, releases the stored methane while simultaneously applying an ignition source.

The two components spontaneously ignite when they come into contact - so you don't need to worry about an ignition system that can reignite the flame in mid-flight, making the whole system safer by eliminating components.

Yep.> A disgruntled former employee of Texas Auto Center chose a creative way to get back at the Austin-based dealership: He hacked into the company's computers and remotely activated the vehicle-immobilization system, which triggered the horn and disabled the ignition system in more than 100 of the vehicles.

Ignition definitions

noun

the process of initiating combustion or catching fire

noun

the mechanism that ignites the fuel in an internal-combustion engine

noun

the act of setting something on fire

See also: firing lighting kindling inflammation