Calibration of an Aftermarket EFI Conversion System for Increased Performance and Fuel Economy with Reduced Emissions 2003-01-1051
A 1.6-L 1997 Chinese Volkswagen Jetta Engine was converted from carburetion to Electronic Fuel Injection (EFI) in order to meet recent Chinese emissions and performance requirements. A procedure is presented to calibrate an EFI system to reach these requirements. Emission results are reported for steady state and transient conditions over a representative matrix of operating conditions for the stock engine configuration and the new EFI system with and without a catalyst. The work is motivated by the recent trend of developing countries to implement emissions standards for the first time. Most published research focuses on new engine technology. This study demonstrates the feasibility of converting previously carbureted vehicles to EFI, greatly reducing emissions at a reasonable cost.
Citation: Goers, A., Lipper, A., Mosher, L., and Higgins, B., "Calibration of an Aftermarket EFI Conversion System for Increased Performance and Fuel Economy with Reduced Emissions," SAE Technical Paper 2003-01-1051, 2003, https://doi.org/10.4271/2003-01-1051. Download Citation
Author(s):
August Goers, Allen Lipper, Lynn Mosher, Brian Higgins
Affiliated:
Injection Logic, LLC, California Polytechnic State University
Pages: 20
Event:
SAE 2003 World Congress & Exhibition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Electronic Engine Controls 2003-SP-1749, SAE 2003 Transactions Journal of Engines-V112-3
Related Topics:
Fuel injection
Fuel economy
Environmental regulations and standards
Developing countries
Emissions
Catalysts
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