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Home > 998cc > 998cc moke (1979) plan for full elec engine management and Turbo | |||||||
18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 08:42:51am
Hey guys
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
18th Dec, 2016 at 03:36:20pm
I'll only cover the EFI issues and leave the other questions to the rest..
On 18th Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
Basically from what I've read the big issue with fuel injection is the Siamese ports - I know everyone says semi sequential or TBI is the way to go for siamese ports Not everyone says semi sequential or TBI is the way to go for siamese ports - sure TBI, normally referred to as wet manifold or electronic carb on this forum, is the easiest but doesn't actually deal with the issue of charge robbing on a siamese port engine, it just makes it easier to tune than filing needles on an SU carb. And that in itself is not a bad thing at all. However, there are a small number of us who are running timed sequential port injection on turbo A series 5 port engines and I know of at least two (including one in Aus) running the same setup on N/A B series engines. The key word being timed injection, not just sequential. The thing you have to bear in mind if considering the Saab ECU is, despite all the bits you mention (which are fairly well known) I would be 99% certain that its fundamental design will be like virtually every other OEM system, whether batch, semi-sequential or fully sequential in that it will run relatively small injectors at relatively high duty cycles, as high as 85% at full load. If it works like the majority, what 85% duty cycle means is most of the fuel is injected onto the back of a closed valve and only part through the valve when it is open. That is why batch and semi are not a lot worse than fully sequential, it doesn't really matter when you inject the fuel so long as you inject the right amount during a single engine cycle (720 degrees) onto the back of the right valve(s). BUT, of course that only applies if there is one injector per cylinder feeding only one port/runner per cylinder so the fuel can only sit on the correct cylinder's valve(s). Once you have two cylinders fed by the same port/runner, it doesn't matter whether you put two injectors side by side and run them from the standard ECU or connect the outputs together (if the ECU internals allow it) and use a single injector, when the fuel goes down the runner on two 85% duty cycles, apart from about 1/4 of it which will go through the outer cylinder inlet valve when it is open for it's 1/4 of the cycle, the rest will sit on the backs of the two closed valves and virtually all of it will get sucked (or blown by a turbo) into the inner cylinder because that valve always opens first. No amount of trimming will change that, the only way to change it to have an ECU that uses much larger injectors - that can run a much lower duty cycle - and can time the injection pulses so the fuel goes through the correct valves only when they are open (or just before in the case of the inner one as the first shot can only go into the inner anyway). So if the Saab ECU can be re-programmed to run much smaller pulse widths and you can programme in the injection timing (not just the injection trim), and that injection timing will need to vary at different RPMs because the transit time of fuel is different to air due to different densities, then you might make it work. But to set it up you need to monitor the inner and outer cylinder AFRs independently and, if you want any form of closed loop control, the ECU would need the ability to read two widebands and know which to apply to which injection pulse and so on. In other words it's not easy. Rover achieved it with the MPI Mini, they doubled up the output channels of their basic MEMs unit to feed two large injectors and ran a sequential timing injection regime which was of a mixture of either two short pulses when the respective valves were actually open or one longer pulse over the period the two valves were open, timed so the correct amount went in each cylinder. And, as I said at the beginning, a few of us do the same with aftermarket ECUs capable of varying the injection timing in a user specified manner and either very large injectors or staged injection (or both). The reasons most OEMs use small injectors with large duty cycles are manyfold but the main one (apart from cost) is long pulsewidths are much more accurate than short because the dead time (the open/close time) of the injector becomes a much smaller percentage of the pulse and dead time is inaccurate and certainly not linear so if you want accuracy for emissions control you want a nice long pulsewidth compared to the dead time. But trying to run a high duty cycle regime on a siamese port is, IMHO, doomed to failure. I hope that all made sense. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 09:06:30pm
Hey rod
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 09:09:43pm
but seriously, to remove all these problems could I just divide up the ports in the head by welding dividers in? has anyone done this?
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 09:41:24pm
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 09:42:28pm
for my saab |
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
18th Dec, 2016 at 09:45:51pm
so the two main things I wonder
Edited by s900t8v on 18th Dec, 2016. |
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9258 Posts Member #: 123 Post Whore Betwix Harrogate and York |
19th Dec, 2016 at 07:49:45am
Assumeg a 7-port head is out of the question, then diverds are your best bet if you want to use the ECU. I doubt it can be made to do anything close to what the the siamese MS3 code is doing.
Fastest 998 mini in the world? 13.05 1/4 mile 106mph
On 2nd Jan, 2013 fastcarl said:
the design shows a distinct lack of imagination, talk about starting off with a clean sheet of paper, then not bothering to fucking draw on it,lol On 20th Apr, 2012 Paul S said:
I'm mainly concerned about swirl in the runners caused by the tangential entry. |
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8604 Posts Member #: 573 Formerly Axel Podland |
19th Dec, 2016 at 09:52:38am
On 18th Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
so the two main things I wonder - what duty cycle do I want to aim for - what size injectors should I start with (thought maybe these saab ones could be a good starting point at 345cc/min now i've never had to mess with the crankshaft delay map, so I am not sure about how to interpret it, I know that its referring to crankshaft degrees, and its obvious the delay reduces as RPM and Boost increase... ??? I suppose lets talk about my saab for example if this is the cam timing (8 valve) Inlet opens: 12deg BTDC closes 40deg ABDC duration 232 Exhaust opens: 62deg BBDC closes 2deg ATDC 244 I want the injection to be happening with the inlet valve open riiiight, so how does that correlate back? it seems like the delay map is telling it to inject onto closed inlet valves - ?would this be to reduce emissions when cold? Looks like your ECU will allow you to map injection timing. As long as it is a fully sequential system, then this is all you need. Forget dividing the runner as it will seriously restrict the breathing of the port. It is very difficult to calculate the injection timing as there are so many variables. If you use 2 widebands then you will quickly find out what settings you need. Saul Bellow - "A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
19th Dec, 2016 at 01:05:37pm
thanks paul, I will keep the forum updated! I reckon I can makei it work well, the fact I can control individual fuel and ignition timing means that even if I ran it sequential without any sort of care or provision for the siamese ports the system will adapt and compensate for different intake lengths very easily... had simialr problems converting my 8 valve saab to trionic - everyone said it coudlnt be done, just needed a bit of brains!
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
20th Dec, 2016 at 09:57:22am
found a post on the mustang forums who did a really good write up
Edited by s900t8v on 20th Dec, 2016. |
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8604 Posts Member #: 573 Formerly Axel Podland |
20th Dec, 2016 at 10:23:07am
Depending on where you put the injectors, you will need to allow as much as 120-150 degrees of crank rotation for port travel time. Saul Bellow - "A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
20th Dec, 2016 at 03:32:33pm
wow that is a lot of time!
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
21st Dec, 2016 at 08:53:57am
Trying to cover some of your previous questions...
Edited by Rod S on 21st Dec, 2016. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
21st Dec, 2016 at 10:14:28am
hey thanks for taking the time to reply
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
21st Dec, 2016 at 12:56:46pm
On 21st Dec, 2016 s900t8v said: Provided the ECU uses common Mosfet (transistor) drivers that switch low (injectors fed with 12V and ECU grounds them to open) then it should be no problem, it's what Rover did for the MPI. That assumes high z injectors, the most common now, but if the ECU was/is designed for low z injectors it may well not be possible as the outputs may be PWM (pulse width modulation to control current) or P&H (peak and hold to open them then drop current) in which case I'm not sure if the low z options would take kindly to pairing them up. A schematic (circuit diagram) of the ECU, if it's available, would confirm.
ok sounds good about the injector info, so I could just run 2 injectors by bridging two pairs of injector trigger wires together. On 21st Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
what injectors are you using? what manifold are you using - did you make your own? do you have a build thread or any pics? Honda racing ones but I use low z (I'm the exception on this forum, everyone else is high z) which is a personal choice because I prefer the consistency of the dead time which allows me to have a perfectly stable idle with 1000cc injectors running less than 1mS after deducting the dead time. Home made manifold, TIG welded aluminium. The second (staged injector) manifold, yet to be finished, is the same home welded alumimium. There is a build thread but 99% of the photos have gone owing to photobucket throwing a hissy fit about 4 years ago and deleted pretty much everything. On 21st Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
the project itself is in parts, I am not 100% whats missing but there is a lot of work in it (at least its a moke not a mini right) but I am figuring the main plan will be to half assemble it, figure out what is missing, and make a decision re the level of restoration, but I think to pass roadworthy it will need a lot of money ! I've been to Aus a few times but only ever seen three Minis (two clubman, one van, never a Moke) but that's still more than you see in the UK on an average week.... I didn't realise parts were so expensive down under (although it's going that way here too, esp. 1275 stuff). Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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8604 Posts Member #: 573 Formerly Axel Podland |
21st Dec, 2016 at 01:41:00pm
My build thread:
Edited by Paul S on 21st Dec, 2016. Saul Bellow - "A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
21st Dec, 2016 at 10:22:00pm
the mosfets x4 driving the injectors (ecu grounds) MTD3055VL N-channel MOSFET DPAK SMD
Edited by s900t8v on 22nd Dec, 2016. |
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8604 Posts Member #: 573 Formerly Axel Podland |
23rd Dec, 2016 at 05:39:40pm
You will need bigger injectors.
Saul Bellow - "A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
24th Dec, 2016 at 08:00:58am
right I get it now
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8604 Posts Member #: 573 Formerly Axel Podland |
24th Dec, 2016 at 09:25:52am
I've used the Siemens Deka injectors on my last 2 builds, as much because you can sit them close together.
Saul Bellow - "A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep."
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608 Posts Member #: 1106 Post Whore Hungerford, Berks |
24th Dec, 2016 at 09:39:58am
On 24th Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
right I get it now how about siemens deka 850s http://www.ebay.com.au/itm/Siemens-Deka-EV...q0AAOxykUZTjPL6 These 840cc/min injectors are what I am running on a 1310cc engine. (4 off staged) Whilst they would be good to make reasonable power without staging, they might be too big for a 998cc engine at tick over? Certainly on the 1310cc engine I am close to the limit of getting good tick over/ emissions with them. (the pulse widths being so small) The 630cc/min version work well in an NA 998cc, but for turbo application, you may need to the consider that staging is necessary. Injector selection will be a compromise between peak power and reasonable tick over/ emissions without the option of staging. ’77 Clubman build thread
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5988 Posts Member #: 2024 Formally Retired Rural Suffolk |
24th Dec, 2016 at 11:18:59am
On 24th Dec, 2016 s900t8v said:
right I get it now so it doesnt matter if you have 4 injectors they still need to be able to deliver in a small injection window If you are going to inject through open valves (esp. the outer which is the critical one), yes. One large one, or two small ones side by side openning together doesn't matter but, as Graham says, once the capacity gets large the very low pulse widths become difficult to get good tickover and emissions control - the larger the capacity, the smaller the pulse width will be for a given amount of fuel. And once you are at very low pulse widths the distiction between actual open time and the "dead" time becomes blurred. There are other issues too like having to get your batteryvoltage correction spot on as battery voltage is likely to vary most at idle and mess around the dead time. So that is where the benefit of having an ECU which can do staged injection comes in but from how you have described your Saab one it doesn't look like it can so you will just have to see how large you can go before idle is compromised. Schrödinger's cat - so which one am I ??? |
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
25th Dec, 2016 at 04:39:01am
hey thanks, ok I will look into trying the bosch injectors they are meant to be pretty well toleranced whereas the siemens have a rep of being fairly unreliable.
Edited by s900t8v on 25th Dec, 2016. |
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18 Posts Member #: 11485 Member |
25th Dec, 2016 at 06:53:04am
hmm I am getting confused about this again
Edited by s900t8v on 25th Dec, 2016. |
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