Yes those are my thoughts regarding direction injection versus indirect. The indirect gas charge gets cooled by the head more and combustion has a more tortured path to follow. In a DI engine everything is in one bowl just waiting to go boom. Not being shuffled to and from a swirl chamber.love ke70 wrote:TD42
was naturally aspirated.
now turbo.
running about 15psi through a 50thou jet.
NFI what the flow figures are, no one would tell me, i got in trouble for opening the unit, which voided my warranty and he got a bit grumpy when i pointed out how simplistic the system is...
i dont know how to measure how much gas im flowing, but if its simple i will do so...
and its D-GAS, not dieselgas australia, just to be clear.
what setup is it you ahve? or was that just a bbq bottle attached?
i was told my motor would do what yours is doing if i was to add gas at idle but it doesnt.
it MUST have to do with injection timing, as it doesnt burn until the diesel burns so if your injection timing is a little late for diesel, its gonna be right for the increased burn rate with the gas.
which i would guess is your issue with the direct injection, probably easier for them to knock, seeings as the gas is in more direct contact with the flame front...
idunno, over my head but it seems to make sense.
my thoughts on the matter are, if you had a common rail motor, so could monitor exactly how much diesel is being injected, you could inject the exact right amount of gas to keep it at 25 or 30%. whatever ratio you want.
the D-GAS system works by adding X litres at Y pounds of boost.
irrespective of throttle position or RPM, so their claims that it injects the right amount is rubbish in my opinion.
how can it inject the right amount based on boost only, its going to be rich down low and lean up high.
all in my opinion. i am happy with the D-GAS unit, its just not as sophisticated as i would like.
this is the older system, but i think the newer system isnt too much more advanced...
cheers, andy
But common rail engines are direct injection. Most (maybe all) use sequenced injection with up to four pulses. How lpg reacts with that will be interesting, I'd expect it to all go up in the pilot.
Regarding timing. I first ran this experiment about a year ago when I was running very advanced timing (experimenting with the full run of timing adjustment at the tim). Right now I'm on the retarded side of the factory marks but the behaviour on the video is the same as I experienced a year ago.
I don't have a real fumigation setup, this is just a simple test using a bbq bottle. If I can score some better gas measurement gear I'll repeat it at a later stage.