MPNick said:
Think about this. How about running full throttle full boost at 6,000rpms. Then shut off the ignition. What would happen with all of the fuel that the injectors are still pumping into the engine. Then let if get filled with raw fuel and turn the spark back on.
ok relate this to a pcm that cuts both...not sure if that is ours or not...but the ones the do cut ignition, also cut fuel...I am not talking about an ECU that pulls ignition completely off, and leaves the injectors operating...
pulling both will NOT ignite a lean mixture, and will NOT allow fuel puddling and flooding...
we are getting confused I think though...I can't think of an instance in which what you just described could happen...if you spray fuel in, and not ignite it, then nothing happens on the power stroke...and all that unused s*** is pushed out on the next exhaust stroke...it would be grosse and give you hellish back fires once the engine returns to normal operation...but thats it...you make it sound like there will be more than one intake stroke worth of air and fuel in there, which there won't be...forgive me if I am missing what you are saying...
So anyway...not cutting the fuel will not make your engine explode...you can turn the ignition off and keep dumping fuel all you want...9 times out of 10 you will simply stall and sputter the enigne when you turn the ignition back on (think about what flooding an engine in reality is...too much fuel)...if anything is going to pop it will be the exhaust manifold once things get going again...
Now the other end is where you can pop an engine....If you are screaming at full boost, and cut the injectors...but not the ignition...you are setting yourself up for one serious show...at high rpm, the piston speeds are so fast that it is very common for residual fuel to not be completely burned, as well not completely pushed out of the chamber...Not only that but you are still feeding fresh air, regardless of injector operation...So lots more good air, and no more good fuel will sometimes make whats known as a "flash expansion"...and very few engines can withstand a few strokes of that...this is exponentially more common on cars running richer A/F's for safety...So you can potentially end up igniting a mixture with north of 20:1 at extremely high speed...
there probably won't be enough fuel for it to ignite everything in most cases though...at least on a small displacement engine such as this...
Beavis I agree...the only argument for the environmental thing is what area the engine operates at during this limit...the stock ecu is programmed for efficient and enviromentally friendly low rpm/load driving...in which it is in closed loop...when it kicks into open, everyone knows how it gets dog rich and makes the engine suck...and the rev limit is always during open loop as far as I can tell...an area where mazda tried to keep the engine safe as possible...and being that the engine can't breathe for s*** at high rpm, and is being fed tons of fuel...leaves a lot of room for the problems I mentioned earlier in this post...
But I have no idea...all I know is that most new ECU's do both as far as I can tell...whether ours does or not is beyond me...