WhiteBlue wrote:xpensive wrote:Well obviously, if you by a leaner mix mean that you keep the amount of fuel injected constant, but somehow increase the amount of air, the total massflow will be higher. But I'm not sure this is how an engine works, the other way around seems somewhat more practical, if you for whatever reason want to play with this.
I'm obviously aware what Wikipedia said about useful lambdas in engines because I introduced the reference to the wiki page. I did this to show that indeed the stoichiometric AFR is 14.7.
I also added the caveat that the lambda values used in Edi's calculation are not realistic for F1 purposes.
Nevertheless the principle holds true that the mass flow increases at constant fuel consumption and higher lambda values. There is no way around that basic truth. The way lambda increases in an F1 engine is by calling up fuel injection maps with shorter injection times. So to compensate for the reduction of fuel flow the driver will need to increase the throttle setting to get back on the same fuel flow at higher lambda.
If you want to compare mass flow at constant throttle and higher lambda obviously the mass flow will go down. This is why people find it difficult to understand the concept.
You are a dangerous man.
Verbal gymnastics at it best.
Got to hand it to you though, you're a verbal Houdini.
The mass flow doesn't increase naturally, you held the fuel constant and, made the air increase to get the result you want.
The convention you used is not used by anyone else, and is only made to dispute the fact that a leaner mixture has less mass than a richer mixture of the same amount of air.
You know this already so we'll end this here and get back to the engine talk.
Let me just say this about why your method is not bullet proof; the air demand is variable up to a certain point. At wide open throttle you can't add any more, because of the volumetric efficiency of a natural aspirated engine. All you can do is vary the fuel.
So if you had 68g of fuel and wanted to lean it out to lambda 1.5, and the engine is at WOT , you would not be able to add more air! unless you force air into the engine; that's forced induction.
So what i am trying to say is that the concept of lean/rich is best understood on varying fuel against a fixed amount of air.
Yes air can be varied. But i never saw an ECU that held fuel constant and asked the driver to press the pedal to get the right lambda.
So to cover all engines diesel and gas, you simply vary fuel for different throttle positions, (diesel has fixed air, so your convention doesn't hold there) instead of varying throttle for the same fuel.
That is the convention that is more straight forward.