Last few days I was thinking about something.
Tailpipes of all 1.8/2.0TFSI I was near stays sootish black, no matter how often I clean them. No matter if they are with stock injectors or slightly bigger ones.
Tailpipes stays dirty and can't be kept clean like the tailpipe of 3.0TDI or 1.4TFSI A3 I used to have.
I was wondering why on some direct injection engine they are relatively clean, and on others they are blackish.
I think the main reason is Start Of Injection (SOI) and balance between time for mixing/evaporation of fuel in cylinder Vs wetting of piston crown/cylinder walls. With bigger injectors it gets even worse because they inject small quantities for part throttles faster (earlier related to how much cylinder is filled with air).
So I start to dig for information of importance of start of injection in direct injection engines.
Here is a good read I found directly related to soot formation.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/267576831_Particulate_Matter_Emission_Comparison_of_Spark_Ignition_Direct_Injection_SIDI_and_Port_Fuel_Injection_PFI_Operation_of_a_Boosted_Gasoline_EngineAttached are two citations for above article, that mostly affect my quest for clean tailpipes
It was interesting for me how much reduction there is in the first 10° (between 310 and 300 SOI) and diminishing results after that, even getting worse after 280°.
So now when we have some clue it is time to find a way to correct this.
I'd like to gather all possible threads for SOI of FSI engines together with some basic principles of DI engines in this thread.
So here is one thread I found with good info and some analogy with port injection ME7.
http://nefariousmotorsports.com/forum/index.php?topic=14115.0Later I'll look at differences between 1.4 and 2.0 KFWBH01SLE maps, if I can find some clue why 1.4 keeps exhaust cleaner than EA888.