I admit it freely. I know very little about fuel injection.
What I do know is as follows.
Injectors are "valves" that allow fuel to enter the air stream that goes into the cylinders.
Injectors operate under high pressure and SPRAY the fuel, atomizing it for efficiency.
Injectors are triggered electrically.
When the "flap" opens on the fuel injector manifold there is more air going into the engine.
There is a controller that signals the injectors to open and close.
What I don't know:
How do the injectors know when to fire? I assume there will be a trigger somewhere on the engine that senses where the engine is in it's cycle.
Do the injectors fire off of one signal per sequence?
Are the injectors always a steady length pulse or a variable length pulse?
If they are a steady length pulse doesn't that alter the air/fuel mixture depending on how many RPMs the engine is turning?
If they are variable length pulse, to maintain fuel/air mix, how does the controller determine how long to make the pulse?
I also know modern cars use a few sensors to determine fuel air mixture, burning rates, completion of fuel burn and a host of other things and then auto corrects the pulses and such to maintain an optimal operational mixture.
Does the Opel system have any of these built in?
Since this thread is for dummies, please keep explanations Bubba Gump simple.
What I do know is as follows.
Injectors are "valves" that allow fuel to enter the air stream that goes into the cylinders.
Injectors operate under high pressure and SPRAY the fuel, atomizing it for efficiency.
Injectors are triggered electrically.
When the "flap" opens on the fuel injector manifold there is more air going into the engine.
There is a controller that signals the injectors to open and close.
What I don't know:
How do the injectors know when to fire? I assume there will be a trigger somewhere on the engine that senses where the engine is in it's cycle.
Do the injectors fire off of one signal per sequence?
Are the injectors always a steady length pulse or a variable length pulse?
If they are a steady length pulse doesn't that alter the air/fuel mixture depending on how many RPMs the engine is turning?
If they are variable length pulse, to maintain fuel/air mix, how does the controller determine how long to make the pulse?
I also know modern cars use a few sensors to determine fuel air mixture, burning rates, completion of fuel burn and a host of other things and then auto corrects the pulses and such to maintain an optimal operational mixture.
Does the Opel system have any of these built in?
Since this thread is for dummies, please keep explanations Bubba Gump simple.