What makes more power: carbs or computers? As soon as OEMs replaced the beloved carburetor with fuel injection, a line was immediately drawn in the sand, with carbs on one side and injection on the ...
Electronic fuel injection revolutionized the auto industry in the 1980s. It came to replace the carburetor in the task of sending fuel to the engine's cylinders but it does much more: it controls ...
The carbureted car and truck era phased out by the early '90s. Carbs are still in use today on a few motorcycles, lawn mowers, and other power equipment, but electronic fuel injection (EFI) is ...
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 ...
Two significant components of these systems are the fuel pump-to-carburetor fuel line kit and the fuel injection system. This article explores both components' functions, benefits, differences, and ...
Land Cruisers have been prowling the earth for more than 40 years, with power provided by carbureted gasoline engines, or, outside the U.S., diesel engines. Until 1993 the F series engines were used ...
Just about every new vehicle is fuel-injected. (The last carbureted vehicles came off the assembly line in 1990.) Although they’re more expensive to service than carburetors were, fuel injection ...
Carburettor equipped vehicles have been around for ages. Its simple framework means a carb is easier and more cost-effective to manufacture and maintain. Hence, it has been the ideal fuel delivery ...
In carbureted systems the fuel gets drawn from the tank, while in a Fuel Injected system it depends on a fuel pump installed inside the tank for a fine-grained control over fuel flow. ... The ...
Two-stroke engines used to be ubiquitous in dirt bike racing, thanks to their lightweight construction and horsepower. Packed in a dirt bike frame, they make a motorcycle playful in the corners and ...