MHarryE, help me out here....
"Carburetors were a huge fuel waster because they had to be tuned so the leanest cylinder was rich enough so on a V-8 most of the cylinders were running super rich which resulted in poor burn and oil contamination."
MPFI engines have only a single, master mass airflow sensor in the engine air intake plenum. They are quite expensive. So how could a MPFI engine have it's A/F ratio tuned per each cylinder? Doesn't it tune the "average" A/F ratio for all cylinders via the O2 sensor in the exhaust pipe?
Curious, thanks.
I'll be interested in Harry's answer, but I'll take a crack at it.... lacking individual control points (todays' injectors), the carb had to be tuned for the worst case - the leanest intake runner.
While it would be nirvana to individually control and meter the air into each cylinder, with the cost of sensors, that ain't gonna happen in mass production MPFI engines. So..... my guess is that when you develop an MPFI intake system/engine head , you build up a mathematical model of how the air flows into each cylinder, relative to RPM - that data would be gathered with extensive airflow lab instrumentation during development.
So, at that stage of development, you know reasonably accurately how much air will be going into each individual cylinder, based on how much total volume the AMM in the plenum reads. Not quite as accurate as one AMM per intake runner, but nobody is going to pay for that, outside of F1 or a Veyron.
So, lets say at 2800 rpm in a 4 banger, you have the air flow split as 22%/26%/25%/27% across 4 cylinders. The development engineer then programs the relevant multi port injector for the correct injector duty-cycle (On Time) for optimum A/F ratio, at that specific engine RPM.
I've never written that particular type of control code, but that's my guess on how it's done.
The main point to MPFI (or DI, for that matter) is that you totally control the exact amount of fuel going into each cylinder. Carbs or TBI in comparison is more of a spray and pray approach - the exact A/F ratio is going to vary (more so) depending on things like how the fuel wets the intake runners walls, on its way to a specific cylinder.
Rgds, D.