Yep,the ecu uses a fuel map and references all the sensor inputs to calculate initial point of injection and duration.Remember the ecu only outputs to the injector solenoids,the cam has no position sensor and the lobes just pressurize the fuel in the EUI's - no injection takes place till the ecu fires the solenoid.Can fuelling be calculated by the injection timing map within the engine ECU using data from both crank position/speed sensor and the electronic unit injectors?
Though I got another 5 on the Richter scale down here. Has the AC been on road test yet?
Yep,the ecu uses a fuel map and references all the sensor inputs to calculate initial point of injection and duration.Remember the ecu only outputs to the injector solenoids,the cam has no position sensor and the lobes just pressurize the fuel in the EUI's - no injection takes place till the ecu fires the solenoid.
The AC is sorted,and from the way it goes,(wheelspin in first and second with little effort.) I think its making the 600 bhp it was built for.Keep an eye out on the M5 this afternoon and you might see it.![]()
Not me - the owner ! (Depends how long it lasts before he blows it up or crashes/runs out of fuel,or gets stopped by the cops
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Have you got the "drilled" TD4 going yet ?
Anyone got any ideas then ?
Which valve ?still reckon it's simply a case of the valve is closed so fuel can't be injected into the combustion chamber. after all the full cycle is in four stages hence a four stroke cycle.
Induction - compression - ignition - exhaust.
inlet open - all closed - all closed - exhaust valve open.
Thats the problem,the crank sensor reads the teeth around the flywheel - so not really an obvious answer.The unit injectors develop hydraulic pressure from the 3rd lobe on the cam in between the inlet/exhaust lobes - then the pressure is released when the ecu fires the solenoid.is the crank shaft sensor reading direct from the shaft - or from a rotation that is gear driven by the crank at 2:1 - so that it can differentiate the inlet and outlet strokes?
When and how much - there you go - WHEN....Doozils dun't need a fire signal. It's fired by compression just needs fuel fired in at the correct moment. still reckon it's simply a case of cam timing supplying the fuel. ECU just decides when and how much to inject the doozil.
Here is a little teaser for you TD5 fans....
Being that the TD5 only has a crank sensor and no cam sensor,(Unlike the BMW engines in TD4 and TD6.) how does the ECU know when piston 1 is on the correct stroke,(IE firing stroke,not inlet stroke.) to commence injection and fire it up ?
I think I know how it does it but I wondered what others thought or indeed know.