The topic of cylinder-skipping by inhibiting fuel injectors has been in the back of my mind, and despite the delay I'd now like to add a comment or two. I hope nobody minds if I roll the discussion back a bit :
barrym95838 wrote:
Selective fuel injector de-activation is not sufficient to successfully implement a variable displacement system, since you are not decreasing pumping losses (because the valves are still opening), and you are creating a stream of oxygen through the system (because the valves are still opening) to confuse the mixture feedback and EGR systems, rendering both basically useless.
ElEctric_EyE wrote:
It won't pass EPA standards. Also there was a problem with the power brakes, since that system uses engine vacuum and de-activating 4 out of 8 cylinders seriously affects vacuum negatively.
Okay, I'd like to venture some observations. I agree that when the vehicle is under way there will be a sharp drop in intake manifold vacuum shortly after cylinder skipping is engaged. That's because the driver will naturally want the same amount of power as before, and will compensate for the lost cylinders by pressing harder on the accelerator. A new equilibrium is then reached, with RPM and torque the same as before but with the throttle open much wider -- hence the lower vacuum.
Problems? Maybe! But the one
benefit -- the key to the improved fuel economy we seek -- is lower pumping losses. My understanding is that the pumping losses drop simply because the throttle is open wider. In that regard, at wide-open throttle a gas engine becomes more like a diesel... which has no throttle, virtually no vacuum, and therefore minimal pumping losses -- isn't that right? To be more explicit, during each intake stroke the pistons will have less vacuum dragging back against their downward motion. And less drag means better efficiency (economy). As for the question of vacuum-assisted power brakes losing effectiveness, that would be an issue only if the throttle remained open while the brakes were applied! With or without cylinder skipping, this just doesn't seem like a problem to me.
That said, I share Mike and EE's concern about the engine computer -- even though I can
almost believe it would be successfully fooled. What we want is for the computer to "think" the driver opened the throttle simply in order to climb a hill or counteract a headwind. The throttle position and the MAF support this interpretation. But there's one major anomaly, namely that torque didn't increase commensurately with the wider throttle opening. Does the computer even monitor
overall torque of the engine? (Misfire detection indirectly measures the torque of each individual cylinder.) I guess another anomaly is that the air exhausted from the inactive cylinders will be comparatively cold and rich in oxygen, causing the exhaust O2 sensor (and is there also an exhaust temperature sensor?) to deviate.
Venturing back into my own field of expertise (!), I want to congratulate the folks at
Fuel Smart Global for some delightful electronic cleverness. I'm referring to one aspect of their retrofit-able cylinder-skip controller. I decided to download the installation manual, and while reading it I expected emphatic instructions demanding that you must be
sure to connect wire pair #1 to injector #1, wire pair #2 to injector #2, and so on. But such instructions are absent! Apparently upon startup their device "listens" to the signals, figures out which injector each wire pair has gotten attached to, maps the apparent firing order, and configures itself to operate accordingly. This is a tidy and thoughtful design feature which makes installation easier -- not to mention avoiding some skull-splitting headaches due to errors. I like it!
Via the contact form on their web site, I have invited the Fuel Smart people to comment on our thread here on 6502.org. I hope they accept!
-- Jeff
ps :
Part of me is tempted to conclude that, in a retrofit context, cylinder-skipping by inhibiting fuel injectors
can be successful in saving fuel, although probably at the expense of violating EPA standards (as EE mentioned). That's because the pre-existing computer doesn't accommodate the retrofitted system. OK, in the context of new vehicle design, manufacturers can alter the computer at will. Yet, out of all the manufacturers that've introduced cylinder skipping, AFAIK none of them chose the cheap & simple approach of merely inhibiting the injectors. You'd have to suspect there are some good reasons why they resorted to more elaborate and expensive approaches (such as valve-inhibit mechanisms).
If so, what are those reasons ?