Fuelly Forums

Fuelly Forums (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/)
-   General Fuel Topics (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/)
-   -   Water Injection (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/water-injection-1406.html)

BumblingB 02-17-2007 04:52 PM

My dad used it back in 1980 in his 1980 Turbo Trans Am. Remember it well, Edelbrock used to sell a water injection kit back then.

Quote:

Originally Posted by skewbe (Post 41004)
This looks like a reasonable summary:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_i..._%28engines%29

Works great if injecting into a turbo, Normally aspirated engines needs more tweaks (lean out for FE, advance timing for power).


MetroMPG 02-27-2007 04:59 AM

Another water injection article, for those still trying to figure out whether this has any utility in NA engines under low load...

https://autospeed.drive.com.au/cms/A_107970/article.html

CoyoteX 02-27-2007 03:46 PM

from the last article posted:
Quote:

Note that it has been suggested in some circles that the water can be directly added to the petrol by using a solvent such as acetone. However, I have not heard of anyone actually doing this!
From what I could figure out from my experimenting. Making a system that injects water into the intake worked but only if it was calibrated perfectly and it seem to be around 10:1 with the gas. My car was already running lean from other mods so it knocked easily without water when I had the timing cranked way up. I was never able to get it to stay set right and gave up on it since if it was to little it didn't do anything. More than 10:1 it killed the mileage and power. Mixing it into the gas might work out better. It would reduce the amount of gas going into the cylinder by the amount displaced by the water making it run leaner depending on the O2 sensor, and if the water mixes evenly then it would always keep the 10:1 ratio or whatever works best for the individual car.

Sounds like a good experiment to do one of these days.

GasSavers_maxc 03-01-2007 04:56 AM

I'm coy too.:D Everyone is way off on flow and theory.


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 10:50 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8 Beta 1
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.