9/12/2005 2:36:08 PM
Maybe I should use more discretion before posting stuff from memory nowadays, however lower octane gas should result in increased efficiency in any engine that doesn't require more detonation resistance.Ahmet
9/12/2005 2:42:07 PM
so how do we get that gas with jet fuel mixed in with it?
9/12/2005 2:44:57 PM
I am not new to EFI. It would surprise me that the injector pulse width/duty cycle would reach zero in drop throttle situations. Air is still entering the cylinders, so accordingly fuel must also be injected, although the mixture is most likely leaned out considerably. From the data pulled from the Motec M4 on the FSAE race car (not a production car, so not exactly apples to apples, I know) the lowest pulse width was around 1.2ms, and effective pulse width was 0.7ms at 5% duty. This was at a sudden drop throttle situation, like you describe.I've also had my truck fuel pump fail while driving on I40 and the resultant engine braking from no fuel was more than just a drop throttle situation alone. I can't argue that the Bosch systems don't completely turn off the injectors because I don't know anything about them, but every other form of EFI and engine management I have dealt with do not.
9/12/2005 3:19:34 PM
"Air is still entering the cylinders, so accordingly fuel must also be injected, although the mixture is most likely leaned out considerably."Air is indeed entering the cylinders however no power output is being asked from the engine. This is why Bosch systems cut off the fuel. I would like to think that this is more widespread than just european engines running Bosch fuel management systems, but obviously I don't have any non-bosch concrete data.I will say one more time with absolute certainty that some (I would've said most, but let's keep that on the side for now) Bosch fuel injection systems until recently (not counting "fuel injection" systems that use a non pulsing injector), did cut fuel 100%.Ahmet
9/12/2005 3:59:19 PM
just a question.. regarding k-jetronic/CIS. are you familiar with that?ok.. from what i understand, the air entering the intake pulls that plate open. this, in turn, causes the fuel distributor to send fuel to the injectors. am i wrong? i guess the ecm overrides the signal at zero-throttle?or is this not "modern fuel injection" since it is like dinosaur technology?[Edited on September 12, 2005 at 4:15 PM. Reason : maybe i just need to read that book...]
9/12/2005 4:14:14 PM
You're correct, the air causes the plate to open (more air, plate moved farther). This plate acts on a valve (plunger). Farther the plunger moves, more air comes in. K-jetronic started getting somewhat complex with electronic control units, idle enrichment, etc. I would not consider K-jetronic "modern", it's more like precise carburation at very high pressure. Technically it qualifies as fuel injection, but I won't consider it that modern without a knock sensor, a real built in oxygen sensor analization/adaptation capability, and electronically pulsed fuel injectors. This should be calculated using many factors such as load, rpm, all the whille actively shooting for a stoichiometric ratio. Ofcourse full built in ignition control as well. That would be my definition, these models started appearing in the mid to late 80s, and became common place by the mid 90s (at least on European vehicles).Ahmet
9/12/2005 5:16:06 PM
The above should read "farther the plunger moves, more fuel comes in, or is injected".Ahmet
9/12/2005 5:17:32 PM
9/12/2005 5:55:10 PM
depends on application
9/12/2005 6:04:39 PM
ahmet, you may have been correct. i havent done any logging yet, but it registers "-.--mpg" while in-gear & off-throttle. i was mistaken, but the drive home reminded me. [Edited on September 12, 2005 at 6:45 PM. Reason : -]
9/12/2005 6:44:28 PM
Good to know I'm not going crazy. Now if I could just remember random things for my classes, I'd be all set...Ahmet
9/13/2005 6:57:33 AM
yeh i was going to say. if go into neutral and glide i get a fairly high MPG reading (same VW MFA as beethead), but if i leave it in gear and coast i get the --.- which i assume it does when its really super high or dividing by 0.. which i interpret as little to no FI activity.. but either way its better than when coasting in neutral[Edited on September 13, 2005 at 1:00 PM. Reason : hhgh]
9/13/2005 1:00:23 PM
ahmet are you saying that when you let off the throttle that no fuel is entering the engine at all?
9/13/2005 6:48:30 PM
In many cases, that's absolutely correct.Ahmet
9/13/2005 7:23:19 PM
is power not asked of the engine to drive the accessories even when off throttle? are you saying these accessories are driven by the remaining momentum of the crank?
9/13/2005 7:28:52 PM
9/13/2005 7:34:16 PM
9/13/2005 7:34:17 PM
9/13/2005 7:35:36 PM
When you're in gear, and decelerating off throttle, the drivetrain keeps the engine turning. I will say this one last time, not only have I observed this first hand (wideband 02 output, injector pulsewidth observation AND tuning), but I've read it from no less than 5 sources, including the 3 I've cited, Porsche design manuals, and the factory workshop documentation. If you're telling me I'm wrong, I am unable to reason with you any further.Ahmet
9/13/2005 8:15:37 PM
What happens in an automatic? How does the fuel injection know when you clutch? The Bosch systems you talk about aren't very advanced for fuel injection. How high does your lambda go on drop throttle? Most lambda sensors only go to 1.2 lambda, which is pretty lean, but there's still fuel. The f-car goes to 1.2 on drop throttle, but the injectors never turn off completely. I might understand momentarily dropping the pulse width to zero for the instant the throttle is dropped, but it might last for a millesecond or two at most. If the the injectors do not inject fuel, turn off the key while you are coasting down, and there won't be any difference.
9/13/2005 9:24:51 PM
9/13/2005 10:06:23 PM
I am going to speculate about the automatic issue. Torque converter uses driveline speed to induce coupling force. This should happen when the vehicle is moving. I'm talking about Motronic systems in general starting with the L-jectronic. If memory serves me correctly, internal Bosch designation for the current engine control units are still derived from the earliest motronic versions. They're considered related, but more sophisticated. I feel silly saying this one more time... Injectors completely shut off. I've not only tuned several cars this way myself, I've seen the factory fuel injection tables. Most oxygen sensors will stop registering a value. All of that should be a moot point as the Bosch design manuals clearly state motronic (what they call modern in their latest editions) to completely cut fuel. One more data point, as if this isn't enough, EGTs will also register ambient, given enough time in coasting. Indeed, if you turn off the key while coasting, there will not be ANY difference other than electrical accessories turning off. I understand this concept does not seem intuitive to you guys, but I've shared facts with you, and posted clear references for you to look them up. I cannot sit here and defend verifiable facts any longer.I can seperately talk to you about your F-car if you wish but I simply will not debate typical Bosch motronic behaviour any longer. What kind of fuel injection does it utilize? We're not talking about a 308 or anything are we?Ahmet
9/13/2005 10:07:15 PM
9/13/2005 10:15:15 PM
9/13/2005 11:03:56 PM
Cutting fuel completely sounds counterintuitive to me. We use a Motec M4 on the race car, write all the maps and set everything ourselves on a 35 year old water brake engine dyno. The highest lambda reads is 1.2, and it'll read that in ambient air as well as in drop throttle situations, but there is still fuel present in combustion. The torque converter doesn't work well transferring torque in the opposite direction, so I don't see how an automatic is to keep running in these drop throttle, no fuel situations. What happens if the clutch is depressed while the engine is getting no fuel?[Edited on September 13, 2005 at 11:14 PM. Reason : ]
9/13/2005 11:12:04 PM
John, I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic or not. If you mean it in seriousness, you can look it up yourself. It's in there.optmusprimer, neither how injector pulsewidth is determined nor idle air control circuitry has any relevance to the topic at hand. I will have to ignore your post, when also coupled with your earlier umbrella statement "no. nothing else to be said about it, except that the above statement is never correct. never. " which is plain incorrect.Poe, "The torque converter doesn't work well transferring torque in the opposite direction", they do in the Volvo and Honda automatics I have experience with. These are not the ECUs that I claim to shut injectors however, so I will not speculate there. " What happens if the clutch is depressed while the engine is getting no fuel?", the rpms drop to a pre determined rpm level before fuel injectors are "softly" brought back online (forexample in a batch, -->skip revolution--> batch, -->fire every time). The RPM for injectors to come back online is usually a few hundred above idle. You're programming the Motec, if you want you could map it to inject no fuel when the throttle is closed at higher rpm, and introduce fuel back say 300rpm above idle speed, to be at "regular" mixure by idle. You'd want to interpolate the fueling between this value and the idle. Perhaps you'd have to go a bit richer than normal for a small rpm range to "catch" the engine properly.I have just described you how to mimic the engine management system's behaviour in a VW, BMW, Porsche, etc. when coasting in gear, or when backing off the throttle in neutral. In short, when the engine is revving down with no "load" (closed throttle).Ahmet
9/13/2005 11:32:58 PM
what you are talking about is the trip down from a high engine speed back to idle, no load on engine. that is the only time fuel is cut 100%. what poe87 and i both mistook you for stating was that at idle (which is what some of us american boys call "let off the throttle") all fuel is cut. now of course, being form durham we has never heard of this german bosch super perpetual motion mechanical fuel injection and we thank you for clarifying.
9/13/2005 11:47:32 PM
can we all have makeup sex?
9/14/2005 12:43:48 AM
i swear to christ, ahmet posts in such a manner that i believe every word he says.thats never happened on tww before.
9/14/2005 12:59:21 AM
9/14/2005 6:18:34 AM
I can only think of one way to do that with the motec, it would be with a throttle position compensation, but I couldn't make it do the whole soft re-supply of fuel. I don't really see why I would do that though. It is set up with accel and decel tables, so when the efficiency point drops at a given rate, fuel is scaled back by a clamp value and returns to the main fuel map values over a set decay time. What happens when you get back on the throttle? Does it skip a revolution then too? Automatics will send some torque back to the engine on coast down, but not as much as a manual.[Edited on September 14, 2005 at 8:58 AM. Reason : ]
9/14/2005 8:54:24 AM
9/25/2005 7:27:42 PM