11-29-2012, 08:28 AM
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#11 (permalink)
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Master EcoModder
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arcosine
19 mpg, Subarus suck at mileage, always lower than sticker. It's that stupid way too over square boxer engine.
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Wouldn't be so quick to blame the oversquareness. When they released the FB20 they said they had reduced friction 29% from the EJ20. 29 whopping percent. That is huge. Of course, having a more modern combustion chamber design helps, but we all know how much friction has to do with fuel economy. 29% is probably on the order of removing all pumping losses.
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11-29-2012, 12:33 PM
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#12 (permalink)
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Master Ecomadman
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Not quick to blame, I had one a long time ago. You can reduce the friction all you want, but if the heat escapes through all that combustion chamber surface area, you loose.
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11-29-2012, 12:59 PM
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#13 (permalink)
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tire pressure is good, my exhaust smell is actually worst off now. my whole driveway smells like a gas station when i start it up lol. i thought oversquare allows for lower friction losses?! one reason why maybe my BSFC sweetspot is wide from 1500-4000rpm at %80+ load? i think this has more due to do with the all-wheel drive and slightly large fuel pump and 500c injectors. also from what i have read the AVLS system is almost 90% of the time in high lift mode. and as for heat as i said i never see it go below 88'c wether at idle or highway cruising. i'm sure this engine just doesn't like gas asdditives, i mean i had no problems getting 33mpg in summer highway, now when i cruise it just doesn't go above 27mpg. reminds of running e85 vs pure gasoline in fuelflex cars. i think maybe my expectations are too high...
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11-29-2012, 01:13 PM
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#14 (permalink)
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Smeghead
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ever_green
my whole driveway smells like a gas station when i start it up lol.
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I have had this with a bad signal for intake air temp. Car going way to rich during start.
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11-29-2012, 01:14 PM
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#15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by bestclimb
I have had this with a bad signal for intake air temp. Car going way to rich during start.
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bad as in replace or clean? is that part of the MAF sensor? scangauge shows intake temp to be couple degrees higher than outside temp.
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11-29-2012, 01:45 PM
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#16 (permalink)
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Smeghead
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Wire had a brake in it. The computer showed -40 (according to Ultra gauge) MAF is separate but the temp probe samples the same air and the computer corrects the MAF for intake air temp(this was on a the Ford though most MAF systems are similar). If your scan gauge is showing a close number I would not suspect a problem there.
The smell of fuel is pretty indicative of a very rich mix.
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11-29-2012, 04:18 PM
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#17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arcosine
Not quick to blame, I had one a long time ago. You can reduce the friction all you want, but if the heat escapes through all that combustion chamber surface area, you loose.
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Yea well, either way doesn't hurt to have double digit percentage increases in mechanical efficiency AND combustion efficiency (Mazda is undergoing a similar fuel efficiency leap lol)
But don't hate on short stroke engines, the BMW S65B40 for example is a beauty. Piston and head design matters more than dimensions anyways. Mazda Skyactiv engines may have good bore/stroke ratio, but the extremely high compression ratio usually gives the combustion chamber a bad shape, so they gave it that rather deep piston bowl. In fact the low compression ratio on the EJ engines probably helped the heat rejection (at a greater efficiency penalty of course).
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11-29-2012, 04:33 PM
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#18 (permalink)
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Got MPG?
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Sometimes when fuel economy takes a dump in the winter it makes me want to drive much faster than normal just because I know its going to suck anyways...so if I pass you going 120km/hr compared to my usual 90 km/hr...that is why.
I keep all other items in place though..grill block, tires at 40 psi and block heater when below-15C...the entire year round..
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11-29-2012, 05:30 PM
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#19 (permalink)
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Master Ecomadman
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I don't like over square engines. Fine for performance, but not fuel economy. combustion surface area increases buy the bore squared. 100 mm bore has 50% more area than a 80 mm bore.
• Prius:
1,497 cc 1.5 liters in-line 4 front engine with 75.0 mm bore, 84.7 mm stroke, 13.0 compression ratio.
Honda CRX HF: Engine Bore/Stroke 75.0x84.5mm
Saturn S series: 82 Bore× 90 mm stroke
Honda Insight: 72 bore × 81.5 mm stroke
Subaru EJ25
Displacement: 2457 cc
Bore: 99.5 mm
Stroke: 79.0 mm
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11-29-2012, 06:23 PM
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#20 (permalink)
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Master EcoModder
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Quote:
Originally Posted by arcosine
I don't like over square engines. Fine for performance, but not fuel economy. combustion surface area increases buy the bore squared. 100 mm bore has 50% more area than a 80 mm bore.
• Prius:
1,497 cc 1.5 liters in-line 4 front engine with 75.0 mm bore, 84.7 mm stroke, 13.0 compression ratio.
Honda CRX HF: Engine Bore/Stroke 75.0x84.5mm
Saturn S series: 82 Bore× 90 mm stroke
Honda Insight: 72 bore × 81.5 mm stroke
Subaru EJ25
Displacement: 2457 cc
Bore: 99.5 mm
Stroke: 79.0 mm
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And the most efficient mega diesels in giant ships have a 3 foot bore and a 9 foot stroke, with a scotch yoke to eliminate piston side loads. Longer stroke means a better lever. Not many short stroke engines are in the top percentages for best BSFC.
regards
Mech
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