Re: Diesel engine technology?
JB,<br />Common rail is nothing new. Surprisingly, I pulled one of my old college ME textbooks and its included in the description of diesel fuel metering systems. There are 3 basic types of fuel metering for diesel engines:<br />1. Individual Pump Systems, a seperate metering and compression pump for each cylinder. Bulky and expensive.<br />2. Distributor systems, a single pump for compressing the fuel with a dividing device for distributing the fuel to all the cylinders.<br />3. Common Rail Systems, a single pump for compressing the fuel within a common manifold (or "rail") with a seperate metering element for each cylinder.<br />The Common Rail System is more precise and lends itself better to electronic control (metering elements, or injectors seperately controlled for each cylinder), increasing both efficiency and power while reducing emissions and improving fuel economy. This system is also used on modern gasoline engines. My '98 Jeep 4.0L gas motor utilizes a "common-rail" system and is a type of multi-port injection, and can also be called DFI.<br />To quote (source stated below, and I'm bored today): "Common rail systems were, once, quite popular for large, slow-speed diesel engines, but through the years, were replaced by jerk-pump common rail injection. In this system, the high pressure pump serves only to deliver fuel into the common rail, with the pressure held constant by a pressure-regulating valve (or varied by the throttle and governor, when desired). Thus the maximum pressure is under direct control, and the metering problem is not hnadled by the high pressure pump; hence extreme accuracy in manufacture is not demanded (lower costs). On the other hand, the discharge from the nozzles is regulated by the size of the metering orifice (and time) and the presure drop in the delivery lines. Hence the nozzles must be closely matched to ensure equal distribution among the cylinders. The common-rail system tensd to be self governing; if the speed falls, an increased quantity of fuel is injected (more time the individually controlled ejectors are open), since the supply (pressure) of fuel is indepenent of engine speed. Interest in the common rail system has revived with the demand for greater output (per cubic inch) and higher speeds."<br />Source: Internal Combustion Engines and Air Pollution, Edward F. Obert, Harper and Row Publishers, Inc. 1973, pg 439.