Modern trucks rely heavily on precise fuel delivery systems to maintain performance, fuel economy, and emissions control.
Electronic fuel injection is older than you think, the earliest example being the failed Bendix Electrojector system from 1957. Bosch bought the rights to the Eletrojector system and developed it into ...
Electronic fuel injection. These three words can strike fear in even the most seasoned automotive technician. The reality, however, is that no carbureted induction system can match the fuel-metering ...
When it comes to computer technology, nothing stays the same for long. The state of the art has a nasty tendency to expand and improve. At least that's what's happening at a new company called FP ...
Having fuel injectors on all mass-produced vehicles is one of the biggest automotive breakthroughs of the past few decades. If you've ever gone through having to start an engine with a poorly tuned ...
Port fuel injection (PFI) was a major milestone in the early '80s. The integration of PFI rapidly changed the way fuel was delivered by increasing fuel economy and improving engine performance. Even ...
Turns out the old technology did a few things no computer has matched.
Don't get us wrong. There's absolutely nothing wrong with a carburetor. These largely mechanical devices have delivered precise amounts of air and fuel into engines from the very first internal ...