Refine Your Search

Search Results

Viewing 1 to 3 of 3
Technical Paper

Electrically Propelled Vehicles at BMW - Experience to Date and Development Trends

1991-02-01
910245
Back in the first two decades of automobile development, electric propulsion was a serious competitor for the internal combustion engine. Electrically-propelled vehicles, however, soon proved unable to satisfy users' increasing performance demands in terms of range, acceleration, top speed and hill-climbing, together with such factors as operating life, initial purchase price, running costs and reliability. Engineers investigating electric propulsion today face precisely the same unwelcome legacy as their predecessors, despite many and varied attempts in the meantime to improve the components of the electric vehicle's drive system (energy storage device, motors, controller). Progress in battery development, particularly in the case of the NaS system, has nevertheless enabled us at least partly to overcome the previous problems associated with electric drive systems, though it cannot be claimed that all obstacles to its commercial application have been eliminated as yet.
Technical Paper

Optimum Diesel Fuel for Future Clean Diesel Engines

2007-01-23
2007-01-0035
Over the next decades to come, fossil fuel powered Internal Combustion Engines (ICE) will still constitute the major powertrains for land transport. Therefore, their impact on the global and local pollution and on the use of natural resources should be minimized. To this end, an extensive fundamental and practical study was performed to evaluate the potential benefits of simultaneously co-optimizing the system fuel-and-engine using diesel as an example. It will be clearly shown that the still unused co-optimizing of the system fuel-and-engine (including advanced exhaust after-treatment) as a single entity is a must for enabling cleaner future road transport by cleaner fuels since there are large, still unexploited potentials for improvements in road fuels which will provide major reductions in pollutant emissions both in vehicles already in the field and even more so in future dedicated vehicles.
Technical Paper

Intake Valve Deposits — Fuel Detergency Requirements Revisited

1987-11-01
872117
BMW has undertaken a comprehensive program including laboratory simulation rig tests, engine dynamometer and fleet evaluations to evaluate the influence of mechanical and fuel variables on induction system deposits in modern port fuel injected (PFI) spark ignition engines. The primary focus of the program has been the deposit buildup on intake valves (IVD) and associated driveability impacts. Initial investigations of engine modifications yielded only marginal improvements relative to deposit build-up and, therefore this led to investigations of the effect of gasolines and additives. Fuel quality, type, quantity of additives and alcohol content have all been found to be major contributing factors to intake valve deposition. In addition, intake valve deposit weight has been directly related to warm-up phase driveability concerns using a newly developed driveability procedure.
X