Does too...
Posted by GS70350--
"No, the fuel injected into the ports does NOT normally vaporize, only a very small portion does, and only this portion burns to force the piston down on the power stroke. "
I believe you are wrong. The fuel which is injected is atomized by the injectors, into a stream of VERY fine droplets. These droplets are mixed with a very warm air stream, moving at high speed, and then this highly turbulent combination will enter a HOT combustion chamber. True, any droplets which are not vaporized will likely not burn... until they get into the exhaust. However, the percentage of unvaporized, and thus unburned fuel is very low, unless the engine is WAY out of tune. Even fuel injected when the intake valve is closed should vaporize when the flow through the 'venturi' at the valve seat creates a low pressure area over a hot surface. Those folks who like to run a lot more fuel than the engine needs will have unburned fuel past the exhaust valves.
Also posted..
"Interesting fact, is that some people say that a engine that burns fully vaporized gasoline, will have a cold or only slightly warm exhaust, which would not neccessarily be good for a turbo application"
The fact is "that some people say". That does not mean that it is TRUE!! An engine that burns fully vaporized gasoline is a normal engine, and the exhaust temp will be just lower than the combustion temperature for gasoline. Simple chemistry, simple physics. Gasoline burns, gives off heat, the combustion products are hotter and have more volume than the intake mixture. Of course, it is possible to deliberately make the combustion process inefficient, to get temporary power to the turbine for "quick spooling"; I think a lot of folks do this for the track. But if you tried to run an engine in that mode for very long, parts would be damaged, because of excessive heat in areas not designed for high temperatures.
The '86 and '87 engines have the SAME heads, and the SAME cam as the earlier engines, and the turbo is very similar. The '84 and '85 engines also had direct port fuel injection, and DIS. The PRIMARY advantage of the last two model years was the intercooler.
Posted by GS70350--
"No, the fuel injected into the ports does NOT normally vaporize, only a very small portion does, and only this portion burns to force the piston down on the power stroke. "
I believe you are wrong. The fuel which is injected is atomized by the injectors, into a stream of VERY fine droplets. These droplets are mixed with a very warm air stream, moving at high speed, and then this highly turbulent combination will enter a HOT combustion chamber. True, any droplets which are not vaporized will likely not burn... until they get into the exhaust. However, the percentage of unvaporized, and thus unburned fuel is very low, unless the engine is WAY out of tune. Even fuel injected when the intake valve is closed should vaporize when the flow through the 'venturi' at the valve seat creates a low pressure area over a hot surface. Those folks who like to run a lot more fuel than the engine needs will have unburned fuel past the exhaust valves.
Also posted..
"Interesting fact, is that some people say that a engine that burns fully vaporized gasoline, will have a cold or only slightly warm exhaust, which would not neccessarily be good for a turbo application"
The fact is "that some people say". That does not mean that it is TRUE!! An engine that burns fully vaporized gasoline is a normal engine, and the exhaust temp will be just lower than the combustion temperature for gasoline. Simple chemistry, simple physics. Gasoline burns, gives off heat, the combustion products are hotter and have more volume than the intake mixture. Of course, it is possible to deliberately make the combustion process inefficient, to get temporary power to the turbine for "quick spooling"; I think a lot of folks do this for the track. But if you tried to run an engine in that mode for very long, parts would be damaged, because of excessive heat in areas not designed for high temperatures.
The '86 and '87 engines have the SAME heads, and the SAME cam as the earlier engines, and the turbo is very similar. The '84 and '85 engines also had direct port fuel injection, and DIS. The PRIMARY advantage of the last two model years was the intercooler.