Originally posted by BushWakr
Ok, PW,
Will increasing the pop-off pressures help with idle/low speed smoke? Does the internal pump pressure actually increase markedly as RPM/demand goes up?
Any insight would be great in the search for solutions here.
Bushy
I'm not sure which pump pressures you mean, so I'll address both.
The pump contains an internal vane-type supply pump makes 1-10 psi at cranking, and then starts a relatively flat curve upward as the rpm's climb. This pressure encloses the pumping plunger and helps ensure it fills completely each injection stroke. It also pushes agains the advance piston, which is loaded with operating torque and spring loading. When the fuel pressure exceeds the load of those two, the timing begins to advance.
The "other" pressure in the pump is injection pressure. This is generated by the hydraulic head, routed out to the outlets by the rotation of the pumping plunger, and through the lines to the injectors. This pressure is only enough to get the fuel through the nozzle tip. (There's resistance to flow in the lines and other things, but for our purposes, just ignore it for now) At cranking, for instance, the pump goes into "crank" mode, where the governor sleeve drops way back and the plunger pumps for a very long stroke. It helps overcome high pressure injectors, it puts in a lot of fuel to help start (notice that big black puff when you start?), and the moment the engine rpms get above roughly double cranking speed, it's cut off and back to normal. As soon as you get faster than the beginning of cranking, a second factor comes into play which determines the ultimate pressure generated for injection, and that's the resistance of the nozzle. The nozzle, for our purposes, is just an orofice with multiple holes. The more fuel you try to cram through it over a given amount of time, the more pressure is needed. At cranking and idle, the amount of fuel is low and the speed at which the pump attempts to shove it through the injector is low enough that the pressures do not spike sharply. They overcome opening pressure of the nozzle and some (I don't know how much) more. The larger your nozzles are, the less is needed.
As you go up in rpm, the plunger attempts to inject fuel at higher and higher rates because the plunger itself is moving faster and faster. It pumps for less and less time as your speed goes up. At a certain point (and memory fails at the precise number), of around 18,000 psi, the pump just won't pump any more pressure. Leakage in the head and other factors cause the pressure rise associated with either the amount of fuel or the speed (rate) of injection to begin to level off.
Apparently, this happens with our stock injectors on the 91--up engines quite soon. We turn up the fuel screw, but the pump can't make much more rate of injection, so we are making it pump for longer periods of time at a maximum load (pressure). This long period of injection is relatively easy on the engine (it IS hard on the pump), but it results in injecting fuel beyond the efficient timing point and after the oxygen is depleted... We get smoke. By putting in bigger injectors (pw, pod), we allow more fuel to get through with a lower pressure spike.
Will increasing pop-off improve low speed and low load efficency, reducing smoke? Hard to say. If it smokes because the nozzles are not atomizing fuel well, it might. I have not tried it. raising that pop-off pressure means the fuel charge released will be a higher pressure, and therefor at least some greater velocity... both of which tend to improve atomization.
But, if you're using a hole-sac type nozzle, or one where the needle seat and needle leave a lot of fuel trapped underneath them at closure, you will never clean up completely. On the other hand, if not one of those two types, raising opening might help after all. Raising it too far will have the effect of making the pump take a long time to spike the pressure that far, delaying injection point a bit and perhaps again, causing the very thing you seek to avoid. Only one way to find out. Experiment.
You CANNOT do this in your back yard. The injectors need a clamping jig to dissassemble and reassemble, the shims inside come in a large number of sizes, and they are expensive - some approaching a dollar a shim, and you have to have the whole array of shims, plus several of each. And, you need a true lapping block, solvent tank for cleaning, torque wrench and adapter, and a pop-off tester. Lack any of these and you could be asking for broken injectors or other serious things to happen, up to and including destroying your injection pump.
I've never had the chance to experiment. I've never seen a set of POD injectors, much less had a rig sitting around with time and money to experiment with... so...
Long answer to not say much, it seems, but I hope it makes sense, again
