Carburetor, also spelled carburettor , device for supplying
a spark-ignition engine with
a mixture of fuel and air.
Components of carburetors usually include a storage chamber for liquid fuel, a choke, an
idling (or slow-running) jet, a main jet, a venturi-shaped air-flow
restriction, and an accelerator pump. The quantity of fuel in
the storage chamber is controlled by a valve
actuated by a float. The choke, a butterfly valve,
reduces the intake of air and allows a fuel-rich charge to be drawn into the
cylinders when a cold engine is started. As the engine warms up, the choke is
gradually opened either by hand or automatically by heat- and
engine-speed-responsive controllers. The fuel flows out of the idling jet into
the intake air as a result of reduced pressure near the partially closed throttle
valve. The main fuel jet comes into action when the throttle valve is
further open. Then the venturi-shaped
air-flow restriction creates a reduced pressure for drawing fuel from the main
jet into the air stream at a rate related to the air flow so that a nearly
constant fuel-air ratio is obtained. The accelerator pump injects fuel into the
inlet air when the throttle is opened suddenly.
In the 1970s, new legislation and
consumer preferences led automobile
manufacturers to improve fuel
efficiency and lower pollutant emissions. To accomplish these objectives,
engineers developed fuel injection
management systems based on new computer technologies. Soon, fuel
injection systems replaced carbureted fuel systems in virtually all
gasoline engines except for two-cycle and small four-cycle gasoline engines,
such as those used in lawn mowers.
The goal of a carburetor is to mix just the right amount of gasoline with
air so that the engine runs properly. If there is not enough fuel mixed with
the air, the engine "runs lean" and either will not run or
potentially damages the engine. If there is too much fuel mixed with the air,
the engine "runs rich" and either will not run (it floods), runs very
smoky, runs poorly (bogs down, stalls easily), or at the very least wastes fuel.
The carb is in charge of getting the mixture just right.
On new cars, fuel injection is becoming nearly universal because it provides
better fuel efficiency and lower emissions. But nearly all older cars, and all
small equipment like lawn mowers and chain saws, use carbs because they are
simple and inexpensive.
The carburetor works on Bernoulli's principle: the faster air moves, the
lower its static pressure, and the
higher its dynamic pressure. The throttle
(accelerator) linkage does not directly control the flow of liquid fuel.
Instead, it actuates carburetor mechanisms which meter the flow of air being
pulled into the engine. The speed of this flow, and therefore its pressure,
determines the amount of fuel drawn into the airstream.
When carburetors are used in
aircraft with piston engines, special designs and features are needed to prevent
fuel starvation during inverted flight. Later engines used an early form of
fuel injection known as a pressure carburetor.
Most production carbureted
(as opposed to fuel-injected) engines have a single carburetor and
a matching intake manifold that divides and transports the air fuel mixture to
the intake
valves, though some engines (like motorcycle engines) use multiple carburetors
on split heads. Multiple carburetor engines were also common enhancements for
modifying engines in the USA from the 1950s to mid-1960s, as well as during the
following decade of high-performance muscle cars
fueling different chambers of the engine's intake
manifold.
Older engines used updraft
carburetors, where the air enters from below the carburetor and exits through
the top. This had the advantage of never "flooding"
the engine, as any liquid fuel droplets would fall out of the carburetor
instead of into the intake manifold; it also lent itself to use of an oil bath air cleaner,
where a pool of oil below a mesh element below the carburetor is sucked up into
the mesh and the air is drawn through the oil-covered mesh; this was an
effective system in a time when paper air filters
did not exist.
Beginning in the late 1930s,
downdraft carburetors were the most popular type for automotive use in the
United States. In Europe, the sidedraft carburetors replaced downdraft as free
space in the engine bay decreased and the use of the SU-type
carburetor (and similar units from other manufacturers) increased. Some small
propeller-driven aircraft engines still use the updraft carburetor design.
Outboard
motor carburetors are typically sidedraft, because they must be stacked one
on top of the other in order to feed the cylinders in a vertically oriented
cylinder block.
1979 Evinrude Type I marine
sidedraft carburetor
The main disadvantage of basing a
carburetor's operation on Bernoulli's Principle is that, being a fluid
dynamic device, the pressure reduction in a venturi tends to be proportional to
the square of the intake air speed. The fuel jets are much smaller and limited
mainly by viscosity, so that the fuel flow tends to be proportional to the
pressure difference. So jets sized for full power tend to starve the engine at
lower speed and part throttle. Most commonly this has been corrected by using
multiple jets. In SU and other movable jet carburetors, it was corrected by
varying the jet size. For cold starting, a different principle was used in
multi-jet carburetors. A flow resisting valve called a choke, similar to the
throttle valve, was placed upstream of the main jet to reduce the intake
pressure and suck additional fuel out of the jets.
Inside a Carburetor
The carburetor on a chain saw is a good
example because it is so straightforward. The carb on a chain saw is simpler
than most carbs because it really has only three situations that it has to
cover:
- It has to work when you are trying to start the engine cold.
- It has to work when the engine is idling.
- It has to work when the engine is wide open.
No one operating a chain saw is
really interested in any gradations between idle and full throttle, so
incremental performance between these two extremes is not very important. In a
car the many gradations are important, and this is why a car's carb is a lot
more complex.
the parts of a carb:
- A carburetor is essentially a tube.
- There is an adjustable plate across the tube called the throttle plate that controls how much air can flow through the tube.
- At some point in the tube there is a narrowing, called the venturi, and in this narrowing a vacuum is created.
- In this narrowing there is a hole, called a jet, that lets the vacuum draw in fuel.
Basic parts of Carburetor
Main open-throttle circuit
As the throttle is progressively opened, the manifold vacuum is lessened
since there is less restriction on the airflow, reducing the flow through the idle
and off-idle circuits. This is where the venturi
shape of the carburetor throat comes into play, due to Bernoulli's principle (i.e., as the velocity
increases, pressure falls). The venturi raises the air velocity, and this high
speed and thus low pressure sucks fuel into the airstream through a nozzle or
nozzles located in the center of the venturi. Sometimes one or more additional booster
venturis are placed coaxially within the primary venturi to increase the
effect.
As the throttle is closed, the airflow through the venturi drops until the
lowered pressure is insufficient to maintain this fuel flow, and the idle
circuit takes over again, as described above.
Bernoulli's principle, which is a function of the velocity of the fluid, is
a dominant effect for large openings and large flow rates, but since fluid flow
at small scales and low speeds (low Reynolds
number) is dominated by viscosity, Bernoulli's principle is ineffective at idle or
slow running and in the very small carburetors of the smallest model engines.
Small model engines have flow restrictions ahead of the jets to reduce the
pressure enough to suck the fuel into the air flow. Similarly the idle and slow
running jets of large carburetors are placed after the throttle valve where the
pressure is reduced partly by viscous drag, rather than by Bernoulli's
principle. The most common rich mixture device for starting cold engines was
the choke, which works on the same principle.
Power valve
For open throttle operation a richer mixture will produce more power,
prevent pre-ignition detonation, and keep the engine cooler. This is
usually addressed with a spring-loaded "power valve", which is held
shut by engine vacuum. As the throttle opens up, the vacuum decreases and the
spring opens the valve to let more fuel into the main circuit. On two-stroke
engines, the operation of the power valve is the reverse of normal — it is
normally "on" and at a set rpm it is turned "off". It is
activated at high rpm to extend the engine's rev range, capitalizing on a
two-stroke's tendency to rev higher momentarily when the mixture is lean.
Alternative to employing a power valve, the carburetor may utilize a metering
rod or step-up rod system to enrich the fuel mixture under
high-demand conditions. Such systems were originated by Carter Carburetor in the 1950s for the primary two venturis of their
four barrel carburetors, and step-up rods were widely used on most 1-, 2-, and
4-barrel Carter carburetors through the end of production in the 1980s. The
step-up rods are tapered at the bottom end, which extends into the main
metering jets. The tops of the rods are connected to a vacuum piston and/or a
mechanical linkage which lifts the rods out of the main jets when the throttle
is opened (mechanical linkage) and/or when manifold vacuum drops (vacuum
piston). When the step-up rod is lowered into the main jet, it restricts the
fuel flow. When the step-up rod is raised out of the jet, more fuel can flow
through it. In this manner, the amount of fuel delivered is tailored to the
transient demands of the engine. Some 4-barrel carburetors use metering rods
only on the primary two venturis, but some use them on both primary and secondary
circuits, as in the Rochester Quadrajet.
Accelerator pump
Liquid gasoline, being denser than air, is slower than air to react to a force applied
to it. When the throttle is rapidly opened, airflow through the carburetor
increases immediately, faster than the fuel flow rate can increase. This
transient oversupply of air causes a lean mixture, which makes the engine
misfire (or "stumble")—an effect opposite what was demanded by
opening the throttle. This is remedied by the use of a small piston
or diaphragm
pump which, when actuated by the throttle linkage, forces a small amount of
gasoline through a jet into the carburetor throat.This
extra shot of fuel counteracts the transient lean condition on throttle tip-in.
Most accelerator pumps are adjustable for volume and/or duration by some means.
Eventually the seals around the moving parts of the pump wear such that pump
output is reduced; this reduction of the accelerator pump shot causes stumbling
under acceleration until the seals on the pump are renewed.
The accelerator pump is also used to prime the engine with fuel prior
to a cold start. Excessive priming, like an improperly adjusted choke, can
cause flooding. This is when too much fuel and not
enough air are present to support combustion. For this reason, most carburetors
are equipped with an unloader mechanism: The accelerator is held at wide
open throttle while the engine is cranked, the unloader holds the choke open
and admits extra air, and eventually the excess fuel is cleared out and the
engine starts.
Choke
When the engine is cold, fuel vaporizes less readily and tends to condense
on the walls of the intake manifold, starving the cylinders of fuel and making
the engine difficult to start; thus, a richer mixture (more fuel to air)
is required to start and run the engine until it warms up. A richer mixture is
also easier to ignite.
To provide the extra fuel, a choke is typically used; this is a
device that restricts the flow of air at the entrance to the carburetor, before
the venturi. With this restriction in place, extra vacuum is developed in the
carburetor barrel, which pulls extra fuel through the main metering system to
supplement the fuel being pulled from the idle and off-idle circuits. This
provides the rich mixture required to sustain operation at low engine
temperatures.
In addition, the choke can be connected to a cam (the fast idle cam)
or other such device which prevents the throttle plate from closing fully while
the choke is in operation. This causes the engine to idle at a higher speed.
Fast idle serves as a way to help the engine warm up quickly, and give a more
stable idle while cold by increasing airflow throughout the intake system which
helps to better atomize the cold fuel.
In many carbureted cars, the choke is controlled by a cable connected to a
pull-knob on the dashboard operated by the driver. In some carbureted cars it
is automatically controlled by a thermostat
employing a bimetallic
spring, which is exposed to engine heat, or to an electric heating element.
This heat may be transferred to the choke thermostat via simple convection, via
engine coolant, or via air heated by the exhaust. More recent designs use the
engine heat only indirectly: A sensor detects engine heat and varies electrical
current to a small heating element, which acts upon the bimetallic spring to
control its tension, thereby controlling the choke. A choke unloader is
a linkage arrangement that forces the choke open against its spring when the
vehicle's accelerator is moved to the end of its travel. This provision allows
a "flooded" engine to be cleared out so that it will start.
Some carburetors do not have a choke but instead use a mixture enrichment
circuit, or enrichment. Typically used on small engines, notably
motorcycles, enrichments work by opening a secondary fuel circuit below the
throttle valves. This circuit works exactly like the idle circuit, and when
engaged it simply supplies extra fuel when the throttle is closed.
Classic British motorcycles, with side-draft slide throttle carburetors,
used another type of "cold start device", called a
"tickler". This is simply a spring-loaded rod that, when depressed,
manually pushes the float down and allows excess fuel to fill the float bowl
and flood the intake tract. If the "tickler" is held down too long it
also floods the outside of the carburetor and the crankcase below, and is
therefore a fire hazard.
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