by MarkMc on Thu Apr 30, 2009 11:05 am
Just to clarify for everyone. The dead time of an injector is the time it takes to open. Think of it as a gate you want to go through, you start to push but because the gate mas weight it takes a while before you can get it open enough to go through. The same with an injector, the MoTeC ECUs have a dead time or Battery compensation which simply adds the injectors dead time (found from testing) to any pulse width you ask for, meaning that anything you ask for in the main fuel table is actual fuel flowing time, the ECU has already, automatically added the little bit extra pulse to get the thing open. You will notice that if you put zero in the fuel table and had the engine turning you still get some pulse to the injector, this is the dead time pulse only so you get no fuel injected into the engine.
Now, a little bit further on the gate analogy, lets say you have a number of people wanting to get through the gate but the gate can only be open for a small amount of time, maybe you get four people through one time and three the next and on the odd occasion five. This means you have not got prefect control of the gates ability to flow people from opening to opening, the same with an injector. It is not until you have overcome the dead time and the non-linear time do you get a repeatable amount of fuel. So an injector that has a dead time (no fuel) of 0.5msecs may not be that nice at idle until about 0.8-1msec. You can see that if you have a big injector you are more likely to run into the non-linear time (which is quite short) on a small engine so this is bad for idle. Runing a small injector that covers your top end as well is the best compromise but you may loose a few HP because you cannot get the injection timing just right.
For a street car as long as the injectors are about 85-90% at the top end you will be fine. The duty cycle does not really have anything to do with the cam duration because not inlet cam is open for 90% of 720 degrees, the fuel sort of backs up in the inlet manifold making a sequentially injected engine effectively group fired at the top end....kind of why a race car will loose idle quality for the benefit of a big injector giving them low duty cycles (50-60%) at the top so they can get the injection timing right. Always a balancing act.
As was mentioned, having two sets of injectors can give you the best of both worlds.