New guy.. some questions.
New guy.. some questions.
Hello to all. I'd like to preface this post by saying that I'm by no means new to cars but I'm fairly ignorant when it comes to dealing with diesels.
Now, I've been seriously curious about w123s for some time now. I've owned my fair share of cars but a new job has me looking to purchase a new (to me) car in the near future. I've also been attracted to diesels for some time now.. so the obvious thing to do is to get myself a a Benz. I'm looking into getting a turbo 300D. My friend just purchased a 83 240D and the lack of forced induction makes the car painfully slow/moderately dangerous in my opinion. I figure a 300d would be a good compromise of reliability, fuel efficiency, comfort, and highway speed capability.
Now, my actual question is, when turbo upgrades are approached how is the issue of fuel management handled with these cars? I'm a honda guy through and through ( no not a ricer) and the tuning ability of those cars is endless with people having written free programs that tune the factory ECU with some modifications... BUT seeing how these cars have..no spark and thus no spark control...and no computer controlled fuel delivery...when you upgrade to a larger turbo how do you handle precise addition of fuel? Or are diesel motors much more forgiving regarding that? Is it sort of a " that looks close enough" kind of science or is there a way of "turning up" the injection pump precisely using EGTs????
I'm shooting in the dark here...Please feel free to share any info you may have. It would be greatly appreciated. I've also downloaded the "diesel necronomikon" so Ill be flipping through that as i get the chance.
Thanks in advance!
-Clayton
As far as my understanding goes, there is no "precise" addition of fuel necessary. Since the diesel runs with 100% of the available air going into the cylinder at all times, and the amount of fuel injected is controlled by the accelerator (and limited by the IP). Basically, turn the pump up until it smokes and/or EGTs get too high.
Lets wait for one of the experts before you do anything though...