acamer14
Mechanical
- Jul 24, 2014
- 8
Hello to all:
With all of this talk recently about buying electric vehicles, I thought I would see if I could improve upon a 27 year old design. I have a 1995 S10 2.2L I4. I wanted to play around with the idea of making the computer stop injecting fuel when I completely let off of the throttle. Modern day vehicles do this. Obviously there are some issues making sure the engine does not cut out when in neutral or the clutch is press in. Also, the signal from the O2 sensor will have to be intercepted.
I want to put a relay before the injector on the 12V line. The engine computer has the 12V at the injector then the computer pulls the line low, completing the circuit making the injector fire. I am sure it does this with a internal MOSFET and supporting circuitry.
Here is a rough circuit diagram:
+12V ------ injector ---------- Computer
As Modified:
+12V ------- Relay -------Injector ---------Computer
I was talking about this to a friend and he said, "The resistance will burn up computer." High resistance would cause lower current and would not "burn up" anything. I believe what he was referring to is impedance. The injector is fired as a pulsed circuit making the wiring an AC circuit transmission line. Impedance matching on transmission lines is very important to avoid voltage spikes, both positive and negative, and reflections. However, I remember reading a rule of thumb. If the length of the transmission line is electrically short, <1/10 of a wavelength, it is not considered a transmission line and impedance matching is not important.
Assuming the redline of the engine is 6000 RPM the injectors fire with the cam shaft at 3000 RPM. That is 50 Hz. The wavelength is around 6,000,000 Meters. The wiring is significantly shorter than one-tenth wavelength. By the rule of thumb transmission line characteristics do not matter. However, I feel like reflections still happen. At short distances the reflections still happen but decay fast enough to still transmit the signal.
I would like to gather your thoughts on this. Do I need to take into account transmission line characteristic? Should I put a zener diode at the computer to source and sink positive and negative reflections? How would you handle this if it were your vehicle? Anything else I should know that I have not mentioned?
Thank you ahead of time for your participation and thanks for reading my long post.
With all of this talk recently about buying electric vehicles, I thought I would see if I could improve upon a 27 year old design. I have a 1995 S10 2.2L I4. I wanted to play around with the idea of making the computer stop injecting fuel when I completely let off of the throttle. Modern day vehicles do this. Obviously there are some issues making sure the engine does not cut out when in neutral or the clutch is press in. Also, the signal from the O2 sensor will have to be intercepted.
I want to put a relay before the injector on the 12V line. The engine computer has the 12V at the injector then the computer pulls the line low, completing the circuit making the injector fire. I am sure it does this with a internal MOSFET and supporting circuitry.
Here is a rough circuit diagram:
+12V ------ injector ---------- Computer
As Modified:
+12V ------- Relay -------Injector ---------Computer
I was talking about this to a friend and he said, "The resistance will burn up computer." High resistance would cause lower current and would not "burn up" anything. I believe what he was referring to is impedance. The injector is fired as a pulsed circuit making the wiring an AC circuit transmission line. Impedance matching on transmission lines is very important to avoid voltage spikes, both positive and negative, and reflections. However, I remember reading a rule of thumb. If the length of the transmission line is electrically short, <1/10 of a wavelength, it is not considered a transmission line and impedance matching is not important.
Assuming the redline of the engine is 6000 RPM the injectors fire with the cam shaft at 3000 RPM. That is 50 Hz. The wavelength is around 6,000,000 Meters. The wiring is significantly shorter than one-tenth wavelength. By the rule of thumb transmission line characteristics do not matter. However, I feel like reflections still happen. At short distances the reflections still happen but decay fast enough to still transmit the signal.
I would like to gather your thoughts on this. Do I need to take into account transmission line characteristic? Should I put a zener diode at the computer to source and sink positive and negative reflections? How would you handle this if it were your vehicle? Anything else I should know that I have not mentioned?
Thank you ahead of time for your participation and thanks for reading my long post.