Hi all, so I'v been away for a long time from this forum since I no longer have a mazda in my driveway, but I had a question and since I know that there are a few knowledgable gearheads on this forum I wanted to ask it here.
This whole deal about water injection got me interested and if it would be possible to actually have some good things come out not only on the hp end but also on the mpg end. Here's my thought:
On a FI car it's pretty simple, you need water to cool off the car cause you don't want to run high octane and you don't have good compression ratio for a turbo, so you cool off your chamber with some water and good to go.
But on an NA car, let's say your stock AF ratio is 11.5 to 12.5 and somewhere around 13.7 on idle on a honda, nissan and mazda not sure... So all of you are welcome to correct my assumptions. My first assumption is that you have maximum power at around 13-14.0 af ratio, and af ratio goes down in order to protect the engine, and protecting it from higher temperatures during load??? Ok, next assumption is that if you have some sort of a piggy back and a wideband and you are able to control the fuel entering the engine, what would happen if you tried to keep it at the leanest possible operation and add some water to keep it cool???
Wouldn't it in affect have much better gas mileage???
What am I missing? I read some articles on this but they were all kind of dumb, they were adding water to a motor and relying on knock sensor not to pull any timing and thus not stealing any power, but they were not improving the engines best, they were just trying to keep it.
So??? Anyone?
This whole deal about water injection got me interested and if it would be possible to actually have some good things come out not only on the hp end but also on the mpg end. Here's my thought:
On a FI car it's pretty simple, you need water to cool off the car cause you don't want to run high octane and you don't have good compression ratio for a turbo, so you cool off your chamber with some water and good to go.
But on an NA car, let's say your stock AF ratio is 11.5 to 12.5 and somewhere around 13.7 on idle on a honda, nissan and mazda not sure... So all of you are welcome to correct my assumptions. My first assumption is that you have maximum power at around 13-14.0 af ratio, and af ratio goes down in order to protect the engine, and protecting it from higher temperatures during load??? Ok, next assumption is that if you have some sort of a piggy back and a wideband and you are able to control the fuel entering the engine, what would happen if you tried to keep it at the leanest possible operation and add some water to keep it cool???
Wouldn't it in affect have much better gas mileage???
What am I missing? I read some articles on this but they were all kind of dumb, they were adding water to a motor and relying on knock sensor not to pull any timing and thus not stealing any power, but they were not improving the engines best, they were just trying to keep it.
So??? Anyone?