Marquis
Automotive
- May 29, 2002
- 162
First of all let me outline the imperative requirements of my system which can not be altered. My subject project engine must run on Bosch K Jetronic/CIS fuel injection or I will/may conceed to a purely Bosch mechanical system (reluctantly) as say used on old early 1970s Porsches and Mercedes. The ignition system on the car will be breakerless but of a conventional distributor design, with centrifugal advance and a vacuum capsule for part load advance. I am fully aware of the benefits of a modern solid state mapped Hot wire mapped system and don’t need some after market supplier harping on about the benefits of these to make a quick profit-I work with OEM systems like this everyday thank you!I am NOT interested in any kind of modern mapped system (either ignition or fueling) for this project.
Now the subject engine is a BMW M20 belt driven 2 valve small six cylinder bored and stroked to the limit to 3 litre capacity. This will be mounted in a light weight 1970’s 3 series coupe. The camshaft profiles and a lot of the intake manifold runners will be designed and optimised by myself. But this is the twist: I intend to retro fit the port throttled inlet manfiold out of the E36 M3 engine (euro spec)-S50-with it’s 14 litre plenum volume to get full performance benefit. The single K jetronic air mass metering system and fuel distributor will be mounted upstream of the plenum. The port throttles of course will greatly enhance throttle response. The big problem I forsee is that during a throttle position change, it will take evacuation of a lot of the 14 litre plenum for the K jetronic Air mass metering disc to realise the new requierement for fueling. This will probably provide poor transient fueling response and most likely cause lean-flame-burn out misfire. Does anyone have any suggestions of how to avoid this phenomenon while keeping to the above constraints?
Now the warm up regulator does have a vacuum line attatchment for manifold pressure changes for some transient fueling compensation but I’d imagine this is limted. Does anyone know for sure? Can the port hole here be bored out to play with this fueling?
Does anyone have any background with high performance K Jetronic applications?
Does anyone know of any cars that were produced that had the Bosch K jetronic and port throttles? Early Porsches such as the RS’ had port throttles but had a Sequential Bosch mechanical system I believe- similar in operation to the Kugelfischer system.
Any relevant help would be appreciated.
(again no talks of multiple carburetters or Solid state mapped systems- thank you!)
Now the subject engine is a BMW M20 belt driven 2 valve small six cylinder bored and stroked to the limit to 3 litre capacity. This will be mounted in a light weight 1970’s 3 series coupe. The camshaft profiles and a lot of the intake manifold runners will be designed and optimised by myself. But this is the twist: I intend to retro fit the port throttled inlet manfiold out of the E36 M3 engine (euro spec)-S50-with it’s 14 litre plenum volume to get full performance benefit. The single K jetronic air mass metering system and fuel distributor will be mounted upstream of the plenum. The port throttles of course will greatly enhance throttle response. The big problem I forsee is that during a throttle position change, it will take evacuation of a lot of the 14 litre plenum for the K jetronic Air mass metering disc to realise the new requierement for fueling. This will probably provide poor transient fueling response and most likely cause lean-flame-burn out misfire. Does anyone have any suggestions of how to avoid this phenomenon while keeping to the above constraints?
Now the warm up regulator does have a vacuum line attatchment for manifold pressure changes for some transient fueling compensation but I’d imagine this is limted. Does anyone know for sure? Can the port hole here be bored out to play with this fueling?
Does anyone have any background with high performance K Jetronic applications?
Does anyone know of any cars that were produced that had the Bosch K jetronic and port throttles? Early Porsches such as the RS’ had port throttles but had a Sequential Bosch mechanical system I believe- similar in operation to the Kugelfischer system.
Any relevant help would be appreciated.
(again no talks of multiple carburetters or Solid state mapped systems- thank you!)