The first thing you should understand is that direct-port, constant-flow fuel-injection—Hilborns, En-derles, Crowers, whatever—were never designed, nor intended, to be run on the street. All of these ...
Imagine a turbocharger trying to pressurize a carburetor with its small venturis and finicky floats and you can get some idea why electronic fuel injection opened the door to big boost, big power, big ...
Electronic fuel injection is older than you think, the earliest example being the failed Bendix Electrojector system from 1957. Bosch bought the rights to the Eletrojector system and developed it into ...
If you own an '84-'09 Mustang, chances are beyond good that it has electronic fuel injection. Since the introduction of Sequential Electronic Fuel Injection (SEFI) in 1986, fuel-injection has been ...
Diesel engines rely on different types of fuel injection. Mechanical was used early on, but common rail became more popular for a few reasons.
Your fuel pump pushes fuel from your gas tank through your fuel lines to your engine. Then, your fuel injectors are responsible for spraying just the right amount of gas into your combustion chambers ...
The 1957 Corvette arrived looking familiar but hiding a revolution under its fiberglass skin. By pairing a small American sports car with a production fuel injection system, Chevrolet turned a ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results