Friday, July 23, 2010
Thursday, July 8, 2010
Lecture notes for week 1 Fuel System1
Friday, January 29, 2010
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Fuel Systems lecture notes for week 5 and week 6
Here are the lecture notes for Fuel Systems week 5 and week 6. Week 5 was on the 14th Jan. Week 6 will be on the 21st Jan. Please print them and bring to lecture as you may want to scribble some notes on top of it.
lecture wk5
lecture wk6
lecture wk5
lecture wk6
HCCI single cylinder injection and ignition piggy back system
This was done many-many months ago. Now I don't even remember how it should work exactly. But this was built to help my colleague doing his PhD work on HCCI engine. HCCI stands for homogenous charge compression ignition. He was working on a single cylinder direct injection research engine and trying to convert that to HCCI operation. The idea was to build a piggy back system that would take over the injection and ignition control of the engine. The system would truncate the fuel delivery pulse so that a very lean operation would ensue. The system was also supposed to cut off the ignition when operating in HCCI mode. To assist combustion, alternate firing of the spark was desired (alternate cycle will have ignition spark). There was also a swicth that would allow the engine to operate either on HCCI or on normal mode.
Sadly, the system was never tested. As I completed building it, my friend had found other options. Nonetheless, it was tested using relay in place of fuel injector, and some LED to show the ignition.
Here is the picure of the system. The top half is the simulated engine (relay and injector and LED as ignition).

I don't have the schematics drawn yet. But the source code is here
The HEX file is here
Sadly, the system was never tested. As I completed building it, my friend had found other options. Nonetheless, it was tested using relay in place of fuel injector, and some LED to show the ignition.
Here is the picure of the system. The top half is the simulated engine (relay and injector and LED as ignition).

I don't have the schematics drawn yet. But the source code is here
The HEX file is here
Friday, January 15, 2010
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Sensorless engine rpm counter update
Here are some videos of the rev counter in action. Unfortunately, my effort to modify the display to make it brighter did not work quite well.
The second and third video are the improved display, by changing the pause time between each LED light up. The LED draws power from the PIC microcontroller, thus need to limit the current. They did not turn up very bright. The videos were captured early morning, before sun rise. I wanted to change the circuit and draw the power for the LED from power supply regulator, but it got messy and I damaged the whole thing.
One more thing, the rev counter works best when there is electrical load from the engine such as headlight or rear windscreen demister. Readings are more stable...
My new project is to develop a control system for a pyrolysis reactor. Part of it involves controlling the speed of a DC motor (in this case a cordless drill), without any speed encoder. I also used Selmaware's StampPlotLite software for computer control and data logging... Maybe more on that project later.
The second and third video are the improved display, by changing the pause time between each LED light up. The LED draws power from the PIC microcontroller, thus need to limit the current. They did not turn up very bright. The videos were captured early morning, before sun rise. I wanted to change the circuit and draw the power for the LED from power supply regulator, but it got messy and I damaged the whole thing.
One more thing, the rev counter works best when there is electrical load from the engine such as headlight or rear windscreen demister. Readings are more stable...
My new project is to develop a control system for a pyrolysis reactor. Part of it involves controlling the speed of a DC motor (in this case a cordless drill), without any speed encoder. I also used Selmaware's StampPlotLite software for computer control and data logging... Maybe more on that project later.
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