patprimmer
New member
- Nov 1, 2002
- 13,816
Franz
I have a car I am restoring and I am considering an LPG conversion. We get a government rebate of A$2000 here for the conversion.
I really want one fuel only system and probably liquid injection. Can you recommend a list of possible equipment suppliers. The car is a 1988 Honda CRX and The engine needs a rebuild, so if I go LPG I was wondering what compression ratio I could use with twin cam multi valve engine. My guess was 11:1. Is response to quench area and clearance the same as for liquid fuel.
Do I need to change the ECU. How good are piggybacks.
I would expect to install a more efficient cooling system and oil cooler.
I would expect to change the ignition timing, but I am not sure how best to do it.
I would expect I need a bit better VE on the induction side and I intend porting the head and manifold and maybe bigger valves if available and they will fit.
I would expect I do not need to change the cams or cam timing.
The Aussie model CRX has no pretense of a back seat so there is room for a reasonable sized tank there or maybe in the place now occupied by the petrol tank. That would mean relocating the spare tyre, but I have tackled more than that before.
To investigate further I need a list of available tank sizes with all dimensions. I have not used Mr Google yet, as I only got the car yesterday, but that is my plan for tonight, then tomorrow to do some major strip down in preparation for a complete respray inside and out and repairs to motor, frame, body and suspension, so if the gas conversion happens, now is the time.
The engine is the D series 1600 twin cam.
I am also considering a small turbo, inter cooler and maybe 7:1 and 10# boost or maybe even 15# boost and water/ethanol injection.
I know things can go wrong and burn valves and pistons with gas fuels and rich mixture will not suppress detonation, however I expect the water injection will work as it does for liquid fuel. Is this correct.
I am not sure just what A:F ratio to shoot for to get best power and minimum detonation, and what ignition timing map to shoot for and how to achieve these.
I expect an aftermarket computer and a complete fuel and ignition mapping process will be required.
Does this sound completely nuts. I do like to "bravely go where no man has gone before" and feel pleased when I achieve what others considered to difficult.
Regards
Pat
See FAQ731-376 for tips on use of eng-tips by professional engineers &
for site rules
I have a car I am restoring and I am considering an LPG conversion. We get a government rebate of A$2000 here for the conversion.
I really want one fuel only system and probably liquid injection. Can you recommend a list of possible equipment suppliers. The car is a 1988 Honda CRX and The engine needs a rebuild, so if I go LPG I was wondering what compression ratio I could use with twin cam multi valve engine. My guess was 11:1. Is response to quench area and clearance the same as for liquid fuel.
Do I need to change the ECU. How good are piggybacks.
I would expect to install a more efficient cooling system and oil cooler.
I would expect to change the ignition timing, but I am not sure how best to do it.
I would expect I need a bit better VE on the induction side and I intend porting the head and manifold and maybe bigger valves if available and they will fit.
I would expect I do not need to change the cams or cam timing.
The Aussie model CRX has no pretense of a back seat so there is room for a reasonable sized tank there or maybe in the place now occupied by the petrol tank. That would mean relocating the spare tyre, but I have tackled more than that before.
To investigate further I need a list of available tank sizes with all dimensions. I have not used Mr Google yet, as I only got the car yesterday, but that is my plan for tonight, then tomorrow to do some major strip down in preparation for a complete respray inside and out and repairs to motor, frame, body and suspension, so if the gas conversion happens, now is the time.
The engine is the D series 1600 twin cam.
I am also considering a small turbo, inter cooler and maybe 7:1 and 10# boost or maybe even 15# boost and water/ethanol injection.
I know things can go wrong and burn valves and pistons with gas fuels and rich mixture will not suppress detonation, however I expect the water injection will work as it does for liquid fuel. Is this correct.
I am not sure just what A:F ratio to shoot for to get best power and minimum detonation, and what ignition timing map to shoot for and how to achieve these.
I expect an aftermarket computer and a complete fuel and ignition mapping process will be required.
Does this sound completely nuts. I do like to "bravely go where no man has gone before" and feel pleased when I achieve what others considered to difficult.
Regards
Pat
See FAQ731-376 for tips on use of eng-tips by professional engineers &
for site rules