Back in the “old days” with a simple carb 2 stroke, , the timing advance is connected to the throttle, so, if you had a load (like towing) and applied too much throttle, the advanced timing could cause detonation (which is not a good thing) How does a “modern” EFI engine with an ECU take care of this? Does the timing electronically advance anyway, or is there some sort of air flow sensor that takes care of load compared to RPM and keep the whole thing running?
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technical question fro Rodbolt?
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depends on the system.
NO Yamaha EFI setup yet monitors air flow.
that's the difference between mass air flow and speed density setups.
2 stroke Yamaha and HPDI use a TPS,intake air temp and crank position sensor to adjust ign timing and injector on time.
some 2 strokes use an O2 sensor for injector on time trim.
4 stroke EFI use TPS,CPS and a MAP sensor to determine engine lopad and the ECU adjusts timing and injector on time based on thoses inputs.
MAP is manifold absolute pressure, inverse of manifold vacuum.
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Originally posted by ausnoelm View PostOK, kind of thought it must be something like that, so in effect, "lugging" an EFI engine is nowhere near as bad as with a simple carbed 2 stroke?
Most all Yams now days are four stroke. Much higher compression ratios than any of their two strokes. High combustion chamber pressures and higher combustion chamber temperatures, due to high compression ratios, coupled with lugging a motor and maybe a bit of bad gasoline, can cause catastrophic damage.
While two strokes may suffer from detonation I don't think it is as problematic in four strokes.
Might this be why Yam wants their four strokes turned to higher WOT RPM values? Here in the US Yam says to prop the motor to run at or near its redline value with the boat loaded.
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neither one of you gets it.
carbs rely on manifold pressure VS atmospheric pressure.
EFI is going to squirt a specific amount of fuel regaurdless.
both are stupidly simple but require a bit of knowledge and the ability to shift between the two.
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