yoshimitsuspeed
Automotive
- Jan 5, 2011
- 191
After growing intimately familiar with compressor maps, turbine maps, ECU and other types of maps and graphs I figured BSFC maps would be pretty easy to wrap my head around. I thought I had a pretty good idea of how it all tied together but recently someone made a comment about BSFC that didn't sound right and I realized I didn't understand things well enough to know for sure one way or another.
Part of the problem is that there are so many different types of maps and none of them are clearly defined for someone who doesn't have a complete grasp on reading them.
I have spent probably the last 45 min searching online for answers but from my experiences in learning things like turbo maps I have come to expect that about 90% of what you find online will be wrong and much of it does contradict it's self or my expectations.
The topic that got me off on this tangent had to do with part throttle BSFC and I am having a hard time figuring out which maps have enough data to solve for varied throttle and which are tested or only show for a single throttle position.
Someone claimed that lower RPM and more throttle would always net a better BSFC. Now I know this can't be entirely true because most carbs and ECUs will tend to start adding a richer mixture with enough throttle. With EFI that starts at the point when the ECU trips into open loop. Obviously it seems like you would want to maintain closed loop for best BSFC. This got me wondering how OEM BSFC is generally charted. Is it usually at a fixed AFR or does it include the OEM ECU fuel mapping?
Now on to a chart that I believe has enough data to quantify part throttle BSFC.
From the reading I have done it looks as though the curved lines represent the BSFC path for a given power level right?
BMEP should basically be a combination of throttle position, volumetric efficiency, and combustion efficiency right? Really it is telling us how much throttle you need to give it in that range of efficiency if I understand it right.
So let's say we are cruising using 10 KW in fourth gear which puts you at 1500 RPM it will require say 2.8 bar BMEP with a BSFC of about 300 g/KWh.
Drop to third gear and 2500 RPM and now it only requires a BMEP of 1.8 bar (very likely less throttle) but now we are at about 450 g/KWh so our gas mileage has dropped significantly.
So this would mean cruising at a speed requiring less than 20 KW the lower RPM the better?
Does this account for high load enrichment?
This goes against much of what I have learned about keeping a motor in it's sweet spot more in the middle of it's rev range. Many people on sites like eco modder seem to go with the lower RPM more throttle philosophy but others say that you will bet better BSFC near peak torque even at partial throttle.
So now if I'm reading it right that would mean that if you are using 40 KW your lowest BSFC would be around 2250 RPM right?
But that's a lot of power. Why tune a vehicle for peak BSFC at a power level that would put a small passenger car around 100 MPH cruising on flat ground?
Wouldn't it be better to put the peak closer to 20-30 KW?
And finally, most graphs I have seen look like this.
This graph doesn't provide enough information to calculate for various load conditions does it?
Does this graph just represent one throttle position like wide open?
Part of the problem is that there are so many different types of maps and none of them are clearly defined for someone who doesn't have a complete grasp on reading them.
I have spent probably the last 45 min searching online for answers but from my experiences in learning things like turbo maps I have come to expect that about 90% of what you find online will be wrong and much of it does contradict it's self or my expectations.
The topic that got me off on this tangent had to do with part throttle BSFC and I am having a hard time figuring out which maps have enough data to solve for varied throttle and which are tested or only show for a single throttle position.
Someone claimed that lower RPM and more throttle would always net a better BSFC. Now I know this can't be entirely true because most carbs and ECUs will tend to start adding a richer mixture with enough throttle. With EFI that starts at the point when the ECU trips into open loop. Obviously it seems like you would want to maintain closed loop for best BSFC. This got me wondering how OEM BSFC is generally charted. Is it usually at a fixed AFR or does it include the OEM ECU fuel mapping?
Now on to a chart that I believe has enough data to quantify part throttle BSFC.

From the reading I have done it looks as though the curved lines represent the BSFC path for a given power level right?
BMEP should basically be a combination of throttle position, volumetric efficiency, and combustion efficiency right? Really it is telling us how much throttle you need to give it in that range of efficiency if I understand it right.
So let's say we are cruising using 10 KW in fourth gear which puts you at 1500 RPM it will require say 2.8 bar BMEP with a BSFC of about 300 g/KWh.
Drop to third gear and 2500 RPM and now it only requires a BMEP of 1.8 bar (very likely less throttle) but now we are at about 450 g/KWh so our gas mileage has dropped significantly.
So this would mean cruising at a speed requiring less than 20 KW the lower RPM the better?
Does this account for high load enrichment?
This goes against much of what I have learned about keeping a motor in it's sweet spot more in the middle of it's rev range. Many people on sites like eco modder seem to go with the lower RPM more throttle philosophy but others say that you will bet better BSFC near peak torque even at partial throttle.
So now if I'm reading it right that would mean that if you are using 40 KW your lowest BSFC would be around 2250 RPM right?
But that's a lot of power. Why tune a vehicle for peak BSFC at a power level that would put a small passenger car around 100 MPH cruising on flat ground?
Wouldn't it be better to put the peak closer to 20-30 KW?
And finally, most graphs I have seen look like this.
This graph doesn't provide enough information to calculate for various load conditions does it?
Does this graph just represent one throttle position like wide open?