Atomisation
Dave Williams
dave.williams at chaos.lrk.ar.us
Tue Dec 11 07:02:58 GMT 2001
-> Interesting...I must admit that I had thought that, under part
-> throttle, as the runner velocity was low it was better to inject at
-> the narrowest point. I hadn't thought about whether the poorer
-> atomisation would countermand this.
The TBIs inject as far away from the valve as possible, into the
low-pressure (15-19 inches of vacuum) intake tract. There's plenty of
*time* for vaporization to occur, plus the sonic flow across the
butterfly goes a good job of breaking the fuel up to start with. The
port injectors are like pissing into a urinal; the fancy spray patterns
the books show only exist for a small part of the injector's duty cycle
if you look at one with a strobe.
-> I guess we are assuming here that a TBI system will have a larger ID
-> than the carb as it will not need a venturi?
They run slightly larger butterfly sizes than carburetors on the
average, and without the venturis the flow is typically higher. Some
TBIs mount the injector in such a way as to restrict air flow, though.
Ford's second-generation injection for their DOHC Indy motors went from
conventional injection nozzles to injecting into venturis to help
atomization. It helped mid-range torque a lot, and dramatically
improved fuel consumption; enough to let them eliminate one fuel stop.
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