Jump to content
SAU Community

Do I Have A Petrol System That Utilizes Electronic Sequential Injection ?


Recommended Posts

Does a 1996 skyline gts 4 door sedan ( non turbo) use a petrol system that utilizes electronic sequential injection ?

I beliebe this is a requirement if I want to run liquid injection LPG.

Any comments on LPG appreciated, except from the flat earth society.

Ahh... Yeah man... Rb engines (for the most part) are all injected...

There's only one version that's carburetted, an rb24s, in some random jap small car.

Any engine that doesn't have a carburetor, uses fuel injectors and an ECU, to inject fuel. Pretty much every petrol engine from the mid80s, is injected.

LPG isn't really the best option tho IMO, you hardly save much money anyway... Limits the amount of power you make, saps some power from you, adds weight to your car, and they use more fuel anyway, so you spend more at the bowser...

Ahh... Yeah man... Rb engines (for the most part) are all injected...

There's only one version that's carburetted, an rb24s, in some random jap small car.

Any engine that doesn't have a carburetor, uses fuel injectors and an ECU, to inject fuel. Pretty much every petrol engine from the mid80s, is injected.

LPG isn't really the best option tho IMO, you hardly save much money anyway... Limits the amount of power you make, saps some power from you, adds weight to your car, and they use more fuel anyway, so you spend more at the bowser...

there are different sorts of injection though. there is single point injection (basically a fancy carby) and multipoint injection. but yes, skylines as with most cars made after about 1990 use multipoint (sequential) injection.

The evolution seems to have been;

- carburettor

- single point/throttle body injection

- mutli point batch injection

- multi point sequential injection

- direct multi point sequential injection

Ahh... Yeah man... Rb engines (for the most part) are all injected...

There's only one version that's carburetted, an rb24s, in some random jap small car.

Any engine that doesn't have a carburetor, uses fuel injectors and an ECU, to inject fuel. Pretty much every petrol engine from the mid80s, is injected.

LPG isn't really the best option tho IMO, you hardly save much money anyway... Limits the amount of power you make, saps some power from you, adds weight to your car, and they use more fuel anyway, so you spend more at the bowser...

There was also an RB30S im pretty sure, in old patrols?

i can just imagine the boot space in a r33 with LPG

but why would u want to run LPG in a "performance" car

since when is an n/a a performance car? :P

The evolution seems to have been;

- carburettor

- single point/throttle body injection

- mutli point batch injection

- multi point sequential injection

- direct multi point sequential injection

Just a nit pick, but multipoint, batch and sequential injection are all different,

Multipoint fires all the injectors at once, but at multiple points in the engine (hence multipoint)

Batch fires in the same way wasted spark ignition does, ie 2 cylinders at a time

and sequential fires individually in accordance to the firing order of the engine

Just a nit pick, but multipoint, batch and sequential injection are all different,

Multipoint fires all the injectors at once, but at multiple points in the engine (hence multipoint)

Batch fires in the same way wasted spark ignition does, ie 2 cylinders at a time

and sequential fires individually in accordance to the firing order of the engine

just to nit pick what you are saying, both batch and sequiential are both actually multipoint injection. multipoint just simply refers to whether there is a single injection point (like at the throttle body) or multiple injection points (an injector in each intake runner). nissan specs attribute the 370z with having sequential multi-point injection.

Yeah but that is just marketing spin

A bit like holdens SI-Di shit...Spark Ignition Direct Injection...Spark ignition WOW REALLY! What were you using before that Holden?

Andrew, sort of on topic, but I agree completely with that point! Almost everything that companies advertise on their cars is just a name they give to a STANDARD FEATURE OF ALL MODERN CARS just to make it seem unique and special. SIDI is a prime example.

Yeah but that is just marketing spin

A bit like holdens SI-Di shit...Spark Ignition Direct Injection...Spark ignition WOW REALLY! What were you using before that Holden?

my point was though that both sequiential and batch injection are multipoint injection as they inject fuel at mulitple points. the batch injection just refers to multiple injectors firing it at once. it can be two or all of them.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • But seriously, can we ask for the results of the "tip a bottle of metho into a nearly empty tank" experiment?
    • Hang on. Let me get this straight. The desire is to have coilovers, BC in particular, to be MORE comfortable on Sydney roads than stock suspension? Well, that's obviously not right. BCs have crude damping design at the very best, and typically hard spring rates. BC stands for Billy Cart. And then, the desire is to put in some shitty old worn out stockers, to get it blue slipped and then put the BCs back in? And then.....what? Not worry about getting pulled up by the Plod? Because you seem to have raised a worry about paying for engineering (which actually does solve all your legality problems) and still getting pulled up.... but the only problem there is that if/when that happens you have to show your paperwork at the inspection station. Whereas, if you just swap in borrowed shitty old stockers to get it slipped now, and then you get defected in the future, you have to go find more shitty old stockers then too. You course of action looks like this set of options: Buy brand new stock type dampers, and springs. probably cost a bit more than $1k all up, but will last for the remaining life of the car. Put them in, pass inspection, drive on them forever more. Hell, they could even be really nice Bilsteins and Kings or other lower&stiffer springs if you wanted. Get the car engineered as is. ~$1k. Buy new Shockworks coilvers (or MCA) and also pay for engineering. You're spending a lot more here. But these will be the best things that you could drive around on.
    • Might be worthwhile hitting up Facebook's groups, I know most of them contain terrible people and scammers - however you might be able to find someone that's in Sydney with factory suspension you could purchase and/or hire. Just do not send any form of money anywhere, in person cash only.
    • Thanks @Duncan Ride height is fine. I think it's almost stock tbh. Happy to share a pic. I don't actually have a regular mechanic as haven't lived in Sydney too long. Could you or anyone recommend any shops in Sydney?
×
×
  • Create New...