Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123
Results 21 to 28 of 28

Thread: Is injected gas worth the extra cash

  1. #21
    p38arover's Avatar
    p38arover is offline Major part of the heart and soul of AULRO.com
    Administrator
    I'm here to help you!
    Gold Subscriber
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Western Sydney
    Posts
    30,704
    Total Downloaded
    1.63 MB
    Yes, I've got that GEMS document. Very useful. I'll re-read P80 on.

    I've wondered if I fitted O2 sensors and connected them (the plugs are there beside the sump) if I could tell the ECU it now has sensors and have it work closed loop.

    Backfiring seems to be very spark dependent. The spark on a P38A is not to be sneezed at - it is exceptional - so I'm at a loss.

    Low gas pressure has been given as a reason on venturi systems as the tank approaches empty but that never happened with me.

    The venturi system cost me more in servicing and damage than I think I may have saved - that plus the fact my wife wouldn't drive it on gas were the reasons I removed the venturi system and wen straight petrol.

    We are still playing with injector sizes and gas pressures on mine. We might have the injector size too large and need to come back 0.5mm
    Ron B.
    VK2OTC

    2003 L322 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Auto
    2007 Yamaha XJR1300
    Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA



    RIP Bucko - Riding on Forever

  2. #22
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Melbourne, Australia
    Posts
    557
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Tank View Post
    Still nobody has come up with an explanation of why the Backfires, I've never had one on any vehicle I owned that was fitted with LPG (dedicated or dual fuel), why the big Bang, Regards Frank.
    Hi Frank,

    You asked a good question and I started to dig around to find out more. Here's something that I will cut and paste from some snooping around on the internet - hope it helps!

    Lawrance


    <start quote>

    How can a modern engine backfire? It should not be possible on a fuel injected motor. Most LPG conversions use a single point injection system. LPG in it’s gaseous form is simply injected into the inlet manifold, like a rudimentary carburetor. When switched to gas the petrol injectors are switched off (this is the main reason they clog, they don’t get used enough)

    A number of conditions make backfires happen. Because of the high temperatures, there can be hot spots in the cylinders, namely eroded valve seats, valves and spark plugs. The gas mixture entering the cylinder ignites prematurely before the inlet valve closes and the resulting explosion travels back through the inlet manifold.

    Incorrect mixture is also another prime cause of backfires. Pumping the accelerator on starting will do it as will an incorrect installation. Some systems, particularly those on factory fitted new cars won’t start the engine on gas. The motor is started on petrol then switches over. An antibackfire flap can be fitted but there effectiveness is pretty limited. Some people in desperation have cut holes in the inlet manifold and put rubber plugs in them so they blow out or stick on masking tape so it blows before the meter.


    <end quote>

  3. #23
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Moruya Heads/Sth. Coast, NSW
    Posts
    6,532
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by tempestv8 View Post
    Hi Frank,

    You asked a good question and I started to dig around to find out more. Here's something that I will cut and paste from some snooping around on the internet - hope it helps!

    Lawrance


    <start quote>

    How can a modern engine backfire? It should not be possible on a fuel injected motor. Most LPG conversions use a single point injection system. LPG in it’s gaseous form is simply injected into the inlet manifold, like a rudimentary carburetor. When switched to gas the petrol injectors are switched off (this is the main reason they clog, they don’t get used enough)

    A number of conditions make backfires happen. Because of the high temperatures, there can be hot spots in the cylinders, namely eroded valve seats, valves and spark plugs. The gas mixture entering the cylinder ignites prematurely before the inlet valve closes and the resulting explosion travels back through the inlet manifold.

    Incorrect mixture is also another prime cause of backfires. Pumping the accelerator on starting will do it as will an incorrect installation. Some systems, particularly those on factory fitted new cars won’t start the engine on gas. The motor is started on petrol then switches over. An antibackfire flap can be fitted but there effectiveness is pretty limited. Some people in desperation have cut holes in the inlet manifold and put rubber plugs in them so they blow out or stick on masking tape so it blows before the meter.


    <end quote>
    Lawrance, thanks for that, I can see where their coming from, but as I said I never had a problem with it and it seems to me anyway, that it's a recent thing. I am tossing up whether to Chip my 4L V8 (93 efi and dissy) and fit a 200L gas tank across behind the back seats or find or swap the V8 for a 300TDi and auto, a dilemma, Regards Frank.

  4. #24
    p38arover's Avatar
    p38arover is offline Major part of the heart and soul of AULRO.com
    Administrator
    I'm here to help you!
    Gold Subscriber
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Western Sydney
    Posts
    30,704
    Total Downloaded
    1.63 MB
    Quote Originally Posted by Tank View Post
    Lawrance, thanks for that, I can see where their coming from, but as I said I never had a problem with it and it seems to me anyway, that it's a recent thing. I am tossing up whether to Chip my 4L V8 (93 efi and dissy) and fit a 200L gas tank across behind the back seats or find or swap the V8 for a 300TDi and auto, a dilemma, Regards Frank.

    I've got my old venturi system for sale......
    Ron B.
    VK2OTC

    2003 L322 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Auto
    2007 Yamaha XJR1300
    Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA



    RIP Bucko - Riding on Forever

  5. #25
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Darwin
    Posts
    462
    Total Downloaded
    0
    In referance to the backfiring, I do have A answer but not THE answer. An this relates to the old style lpg systems (as that it what I have gathered from most posts people are asking about?)

    A few years ago a friend had one of those brilliant (for their time) gas research systems fitted to his worked 351 clevo. Now the car ran like a dream, and had no power loss whatso ever from the crappy holly 650dp that was removed. But it had developed a backfire problem, this after 6-7months got beyond a joke as the finer filters were 30 clams each and he's destroyed enough for the founding members of finer filter corp. to retire on. Sounding familier so far.
    Well being both mechanics, and well researched in lpg we decided to fix what no gas expert had been able to rectify.
    We altered the timing, regraphed the dizzy, changed the plugs untill the correct temp plugs were found, had the gas jets changed, to no avail, giving up we decided one drunken night to do some durability testing on some tires, ironically enough this was when we solved the problem.

    We invertably had the bonnet up when the engine backfired in total darkness, now this was quiet spectacular to say the least, especially in our inhebreated state!
    This is what we worked out.
    Electricity (the spark) will always take the easiest path of resistance, a cylinder under compression has a much much higher resistance between the plug gap as a cylinder that is undertaking the intake stroke. This resistance is magnified with old plugs. Now when you have standard plug leads (HT leads) that are old and have been mal-treated they have a substansual amount of resistance. And in our case the HT leads were touching between two cylinders that just happen to overlap with their strokes, the electrical charge was jumping leads!!!! and going to the cylinder on the intake stroke. Very speky we were quiet amused.
    The rest as they say.....is history.
    New Gas rated leads and lead seperators totaly solved the problem.

    Hope this may help at leas one of you guys out there. an I hope it hasn't bored those that already knew.

    Cheers

  6. #26
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Moruya Heads/Sth. Coast, NSW
    Posts
    6,532
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by p38arover View Post
    I've got my old venturi system for sale......
    What brand, usable capacity of tank, how much? Regards Frank.

  7. #27
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Moruya Heads/Sth. Coast, NSW
    Posts
    6,532
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Larns View Post
    In referance to the backfiring, I do have A answer but not THE answer. An this relates to the old style lpg systems (as that it what I have gathered from most posts people are asking about?)

    A few years ago a friend had one of those brilliant (for their time) gas research systems fitted to his worked 351 clevo. Now the car ran like a dream, and had no power loss whatso ever from the crappy holly 650dp that was removed. But it had developed a backfire problem, this after 6-7months got beyond a joke as the finer filters were 30 clams each and he's destroyed enough for the founding members of finer filter corp. to retire on. Sounding familier so far.
    Well being both mechanics, and well researched in lpg we decided to fix what no gas expert had been able to rectify.
    We altered the timing, regraphed the dizzy, changed the plugs untill the correct temp plugs were found, had the gas jets changed, to no avail, giving up we decided one drunken night to do some durability testing on some tires, ironically enough this was when we solved the problem.

    We invertably had the bonnet up when the engine backfired in total darkness, now this was quiet spectacular to say the least, especially in our inhebreated state!
    This is what we worked out.
    Electricity (the spark) will always take the easiest path of resistance, a cylinder under compression has a much much higher resistance between the plug gap as a cylinder that is undertaking the intake stroke. This resistance is magnified with old plugs. Now when you have standard plug leads (HT leads) that are old and have been mal-treated they have a substansual amount of resistance. And in our case the HT leads were touching between two cylinders that just happen to overlap with their strokes, the electrical charge was jumping leads!!!! and going to the cylinder on the intake stroke. Very speky we were quiet amused.
    The rest as they say.....is history.
    New Gas rated leads and lead seperators totaly solved the problem.

    Hope this may help at leas one of you guys out there. an I hope it hasn't bored those that already knew.

    Cheers
    Larns, that may explain why I never had a problem with backfiring, every vehicle I owned fitted with LPG always had the correct plugs, the best leads available, high performance coil and on LPG only vehicles I always had the dissy regraphed to suit LPG. I am also wondering with modern fuel injected vehicles, esp. V8's with Plenum chambers full of tuned length air horns or bunch of banana inlet runners that there is some residual LPG hanging around waiting to be detonated by a flame from an overlapping inlet and exhaust valve esp. with the advanced timing used on LPG engines, something to ponder, Regards Frank.

  8. #28
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    NSW Far South Coast
    Posts
    685
    Total Downloaded
    0
    I've had two Rangies with gas.
    The first used to backfire occasionally until I upgraded the ignition system to a Bosch Scorcher dissy and new leads.
    The second, and current one, I fitted a new gas system to it myself.
    The system came complete with instructions and they made a big point of insisting that I tap the plenum chamber and connect the vacuum hose that goes to the bottom of the throttle butterfly to this new position.
    I've never had a backfire with this system.
    Their explanation was that the vacuum hose, which carries the fuel vapour from the carbon canister, could leave too much petrol fumes around the throttle that could backfire.
    By moving these fumes into the larger air filled area of the plenum chamber negated this possibility.

Page 3 of 3 FirstFirst 123

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!