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When an engine load is 100 percent is it true that applying the accelerator more is just a waste of fuel or does the fueling system account for the load and ignore the additional application of the accelerator?This would be an engine equipped with modern ECU , fuel injection etc.
Engine load is most easily sensed by vacuum. The lower the "boost" the greater the load. For example, a 4-cyl car might idle unloaded at 22" vacuum and cruise at 14" vacuum, but when you dump the throttle it drops to 0 - 4". That's what those old 'econometers' were on the gass guzzlers -- a simple vacuum gauge with a green and red zone to help you keep your foot out of it.But our bikes aren't 4-cyl cars. So our vacuum properties are different. The lag time between changing throttle/load and the ecu compensating for the vacuum change makes it an iffy way to go. Other load sensors are expensive and also not real practical on a 2-pot engine. And so we infer load from the throttle position, rpm, and (in some closed loop system) road speed and emissions.
I may be missing something here but what is 100 per cent load? A brick wall could represent a 100 per cent load. A braking force enought to stall an engine is a 100 per cent load. If designed properly full throttle will provide more torque than half throttle but 100 percent load is not integral to the process of measuring. Now if were talking about steam engines of better yet diesel electric engines we can talk closer to 100 per cent load.
I think the OP is wondering what goes on when the engine is doing all it can and you open the throttle more. IE climbing Black Mountain to Boone NC is a very long grade. Say I'm in 4th gear with the Ol' Lady on the back and I'm at half throttle to keep it at 55mph. Now at this point the engine, at that speed, can't make any more power at a higher throttle setting. If I open up I get no acceleration, I have to downshift to pick the revs up to get more power. So in that circumstance what happens?I'm sure that varies by engine management type but as far as any practical situation goes, not much happens. Just uses a bit more fuel.Hunter
Yes and thanks for that. I can get the engine load from the engine OD2 connection.In the lower gears the acceleration is fast enough (for lack of a better term) that there really is no throttle position left when load measurement gets to 100%, time to upshift. On a long grade for example in the higher gear it is easy enough to see 100% engine load yet still have throttle left.So the answer then if I read this all right is that there is waste of fuel if the throttle is opened greater when load is 100%?If there is fuel waste, then using that indicator could reduce fuel consumption by running up to 100% load but not additional throttle after that?
First, with an EFI, I don't know. It depends on the system and the map. If running open loop then it is all on the map. If closed loop then the O2 sensor will probably rule and the fuel will be held to reasonable levels.Second, carbs. Carbs (butterfly style) deliver fuel through the venturi for the most part. Lower the air flow and the fueling is reduced. Even if you open the throttle more there is no more airflow so the fueling will not increase. This does not take into account other fuel circuits, like accelerator pumps, coming into play. Eg, if you open the throttle the accel pump will shoot extra fuel into the system, but, only as the throttle is opened. Once opened it goes back to just the venturi. BUT....for those carbs with jets and needles opening the throttle enlarges the jet so more fuel will be sent to the venturi. In those cases you will run richer if the throttle is opened more under load. In an extreme case (high load, low RPM) you may even lose power as you open the throttle as it runs too rich. This is a situation with some auto carbs.And...some carbs use the slide as the venturi, so opening up the throttle will increase the size of the venturi reduce the vacuum and reduce the fuel delivered (again, like the delortos). So, in these cases the jets are enlarged to deliver more fuel as the venturi is enlarged to reduce the amount delivered. In these cases you might have too little airflow and starve the engine.See....simple answer. :)Your Norge goes out of closed loop when a preset load is exceeded. Even then the LOAD is only based on the sum of a number of factors. Throttle position, RPM, speed and most importantly manifold vacuum is used to judge load. So 100% load is only a planned for theoretical maximum. All this becomes reality for those that challenge the record books at Bonneville vs even the best dyno jockeys.