jure wrote:ringo wrote:Pre chamber ignition is where it's at right now. HCCI doesn't seem to be for high performance applications....
This concept doesn't seem overly complicated, especially given how fast manufacturers are implementing it in their f1 engines. Why don't we have this technology already in our everyday cars? Does it require special fuel or are such engines less reliable/durable,..something else?
-Cost-benefit trade off
-unproven performance over the whole speed-load map
-parasitics of turbo system
When asked why the Indycar regulations did not go down the F1 way for 2014 to make DI mandatory and get rid of PFI - someone once said that F1-style technology, comes with F1-style price tags. 500 bar direct fuel injection is not where the mainstream market is at and IS expensive. I think the same holds for the Mahle system - fuel systems suppliers have always come up with more and more expensive options. I doubt the latest Mahle Jet Ignition system sits on the favourable side of the cost-benefit trade-off, given that you can achieve a lot with 'good-old' turbocharged GDI (and the different combustion modes).
Also before uptake by OEMs on a production engine - the system would have to prove itself to be reliable enough during its entire life cycle and all kinds of use/abuse that the end user puts the engine through. The benefits of this system over the whole speed load map is not proven yet. I do not doubt Mahle's claims of benefit during the lean mode - but I have concerns of injector tip temperatures, injector coking, HC emission during homogenous mode (more wetted area - so SFC too), soot on cold start, light load operation etc. From Ringo's link - the thermal efficiency benefits appears to come from boosting all over the speed-load map. So that brings a systems level trade-off question - will the benefits of this combustion systems offset the parasitics of a larger turbo? And the BSFC benefits are compared to a naturally aspirated SI engine - which is misleading. MAHLE has clumped the benefits of two technologies - turbocharging and Jet Ignition. So in effect they don't answer how exactly this is better than turbocharged+GDI - where most OEMs are at already.
As far as I see the biggest benefit of this system and the reason why its popular among large bore gas engines is the greater combustion speed, and the ease of integration into a current hardware. Most of those heavy duty large engine manufacturers actually operate in the diesel world. So this system gives them an easy entry point to tap into the natural gas market, with a diesel engine, without having to pour $millions into a new engine development program for natural gas. (swap diesel injector for jet ignition - among other changes - like conrod to achieve suitable CR). The powerful ignition system allows them to use a core engine hardware developed for diesel with only a few changes. You do not need to redesign the head or change the ports originally designed for swirl. The lack of tumble/turbulence intensities required for flame propagation is compensated by the high energy turbulent torch jet ignition system.
Modularity remains the buzz word in the automotive arena. If engine companies can get away with selling the same core engine hardware for diesel and natural gas - they will!