Up next VOTW: Tundra Four Wheel Camper Tour Published on April 17, 2019 Author Tread Staff Tags carb-less, carburetor, carburetor-equipped vehicle, inject fuel, injection systems, Share article Facebook 0 Twitter 0 Mail 0 How Fuel Injection Works – Direct vs Port Injectors Today, you can no longer buy a brand new carburetor-equipped vehicle anywhere in America. However, it’s still important to know how today’s technology fuels your carb-less internal combustion engine. Previously, gasoline engines were fed by a carburetor, which was part of the throttle body assembly. As you pressed the throttle, the butterfly valve in the carburetor would open more, which lessened the restriction on the engines cylinders to vacuum air from the outside world, through the throttle body and into the cylinders themselves. Subscribe to our weekly newsletter This vacuum, also known as a draft, would subsequently pull fuel from the float bowls where it was stored in the carburetor through little needle-sized ports called jets. The jets were how fuel was metered into the intake manifold. The diameter of these jets determined the flow of fuel into the engine, along with the amount of draft passing through due to the position of the throttle body. This entirely mechanical system was pretty inefficient by current standards. Today, carburetors have been supplanted by injection systems. These digital setups are linked through complex computer systems that inject fuel based on the timing of the engine. The computer knows the exact position of the rotating assembly inside the block, and where and when to fire the injectors. Direct injection systems are similar in application, but even more precise as the fuel is injected directly into the cylinder at incredibly high pressures (30,000 PSI+). This video from Engineering Explained breaks down the nuts and bolts of multi-port injection that we find on the majority of engines today, as well as direct injection that is found in some higher performance gas engines and all diesel engines.
How-To's Videos The Suspension Rabbit Hole The offroad segment is heating up with the introduction of the new midsize market vehicles like the independently-sprung Chevy Colorado and Ford Ranger, and the […] Tread Staff January 03, 2019
Buyer's Guide Camp Gear Pocket-Sized Power: The Latest Tools for On-the-Go Tasks The Latest Compact Tools For Those On The Go Keeping compact tools in your pocket can be useful for countless situations, whether you’re on the […] Jerry Tsai October 15, 2024
How-To's Modifications Upsize: Getting a Bigger Tire Size Picking a new tire size for your off-road vehicle is not the easiest venture. There are a ton of variables that you need to be […] Tread Staff May 17, 2018
Buyer's Guide Camp Gear Natasha Adams: Pioneering Female Off-Road Racer's Unique Lexus LS400 Build Pioneering Female Off-Road Racing If you go searching on off-road forums for articles about how to build a lifted Lexus sedan, you likely won’t find […] Anya Murphy October 17, 2023