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fuel injectors Automobile Blog; May, 2007 Archive
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Automobile Fuel Injection

By Car Parts Expert at 05/02/07 11:00

car fuel injectors Fuel Injection
  • Fuel injection is a means of metering fuel into an internal combustion engine
  • The primary difference between carburetors and fuel injection is that fuel injection atomizes the fuel by forcibly pumping it through a small nozzle under high pressure. A carburetor relies on the vacuum created by intake air rushing through it to add the fuel to the airstream
  • The objectives for fuel injection systems can vary. All share the central task of supplying fuel to the combustion process, but it is a design decision how a particular system will be optimized
  • Here are some of the noted design objectives:
    • power output
    • fuel efficiency
    • emissions performance
    • ability to accommodate alternative fuels
    • durability
    • reliability
    • driveability and smooth operation
    • initial cost
    • maintenance cost
    • diagnostic capability
    • range of environmental operation
    • Engine operation
  • Benefits to the driver of a fuel-injected car include smoother and more dependable engine response during quick throttle transitions; easier and more dependable engine starting; better operation at extremely high or low ambient temperatures; reduced maintenance intervals; and increased fuel efficiency
  • Emissions, efficiency, and power: Fuel injection generally delivers a more accurate and equal mass of fuel to each cylinder of the engine than can a carburetor, thus improving the cylinder-to-cylinder distribution
  • A fuel injected engine often produces more power than an equivalent carbureted engine
  • The ultimate combustion goal is to match each molecule of fuel with a corresponding number of molecules of oxygen so that neither has any molecules remaining after combustion in the engine and catalytic converter. Such a balanced condition is known as stoichiometry
  • The process of determining the amount of fuel, and its delivery into the engine, are known as fuel metering. Early injection systems used mechanical methods to meter fuel
  • The fuel injector acts as the fuel-dispensing nozzle. It injects liquid fuel directly into the engine's air stream
  • Prior to 1969, it was rare for a gasoline engine to be equipped with fuel injection, and those few extant systems were generally low-pressure mechanical designs incorporating rather primitive technology
  • Central to an EFI system is a computer called the Engine Control Unit (ECU), which monitors engine operating parameters via various sensors
  • Throttle-body injection: (called TBI by General Motors and CFI by Ford) was introduced in the mid 1980s as a transition technology toward individual port injection
  • Port fuel injection (CPFI): It uses tubes with poppet valves from a central injector to spray fuel at each intake port rather than the central throttle-body
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fuel injectors Archives: • May, 2007



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fuel injectors Automobile Blog May Archive