Direct Injection huge drawback

thescreensavers

Diamond Member
Aug 3, 2005
9,916
2
81
So over on the GTR forums there was a discussion about DI and some guy was asking why the GTR doesn't have it. Apparently it has a huge drawback as you can read about below. I really never understood why the ISF had both port and direct injection, now I know! Good thing Lexus had the foresight to see this problem unlike many of their rivals (audi, bmw etc)

Anyway here is the post:

I hope the GT-R never gets DI until they figure out a way to prevent power robbing carbon build up on the valves/intake manifold.

The fuel does not wash over the intake valves, thus oil and other bypass product in the intake manifold that gets recirculated for emissions control sticks to the valves and cools there turning into carbon sludge and then baked on carbon deposits.

One of the biggest reasons I traded my 2007 RS4 in for my GT-R was because of direct injection and the carbon build up. It took that car from an amazing all around all weather high performance luxury sedan and made it a normal S4 with a body kit. Not to mention all the trips to the dealer, the intake manifold replacements(the low/high rpm air tumbler flaps seized due to carbon build up) and having to pay for the carbon cleaning on my dime when I only used the Audi approved oil, Shell V-Power 93 Octane and Audi's own fuel treatment/injector cleaner.

Here are some pictures.

Close ups of the rock hard carbon deposits on the valves/valve stems/valve ports:
CB1.jpg

CB3.jpg

CB4.jpg

CB6.jpg

CB8.jpg

CB9.jpg


Carbon covered intake manifold flaps:
SDC11714.jpg

p1030152ky.jpg


Before many hours of soaking in solvent and plain old elbow grease/scrubbing:
SDC11716.jpg


After many hours of soaking in solvent and plain old elbow grease/scrubbing:
SDC11727.jpg


http://www.nagtroc.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=39598


Thats some crazy carbon buildup
 
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overst33r

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
5,761
12
81
I've seen that on the 2.0T from VW as well.

I'm curious if BMW and other companies have the same issues...
 

alpineranger

Senior member
Feb 3, 2001
701
0
76
I think toyota gets around this a little bit on their DI 3.5L v6 by having additional port injectors too (although that wasn't the initial motivation for the design). Don't know about their 2.5L DI engine which doesn't have the additional injectors.
 

LTC8K6

Lifer
Mar 10, 2004
28,520
1,576
126
GM doesn't seem to have the problem, or they've done a good job hiding it.
 

franksta

Golden Member
Jun 6, 2001
1,967
6
81
I think there's something else wrong with that motor.

All of the carbon from combustion has to pass over the exhaust valve (or blowby the piston rings!) and those don't have the almighty injector blasting them with fuel.

EDIT: And none of the stuff above the intake valve (the flappy things) have the fuel on it either with a port injection setup.
 

StageLeft

No Lifer
Sep 29, 2000
70,150
5
0
VW can't build a reliable vehicle to save their life anymore I'm afraid.

Anyway, how many miles to get that kind of deposit?
 

LTC8K6

Lifer
Mar 10, 2004
28,520
1,576
126
It's mostly oil vapor from the crankcase vent system depositing on the back of the intake valves, iirc.

These vapors are capured and burned in modern engines. Port injection continually washes these deposits off the intake valves.

Direct injection doesn't, unless you have a second port injector, as some mfgs do.
 

halik

Lifer
Oct 10, 2000
25,696
1
81
Yeah people with the DI motors have all sorts of issues with it. Even my S4 had a fair bit of caking on it, but the RS4 needs cleaning at least every 10K
 

EightySix Four

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2004
5,122
52
91
It seems like its only a vw/audi problem, i looked at my valves with a fiber scope and all were good, no deposits on them after 25k miles.

I think it's a VW/Audi driver problem. Nothing like WOT to clean out some carbon.
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
9
0
Yea that is not a DI problem, that is a either a engine design problem or soemthing wrong with that car. GM, Toyota, etc... do not have that issue. But this is a VW/Audi so what do you expect.

Every time I see a VW/Audi fanboy it always ends with saying "but they fixed their problems, they are good now..." and then things like this crop up.
 

PricklyPete

Lifer
Sep 17, 2002
14,582
162
106
Yeah...I've seen this. There seem to be fairly huge threads on this on every VW/Audi forum. I have heard that other manufacturers are having this problem as well...but I have nothing to back that up...so I'll say that is a rumor for now. If this does prove to just be an VAG thing...wonder if VW/Audi will do anything after enough people complain. I'm not holding my breath.
 

PricklyPete

Lifer
Sep 17, 2002
14,582
162
106
Yeah people with the DI motors have all sorts of issues with it. Even my S4 had a fair bit of caking on it, but the RS4 needs cleaning at least every 10K

I didn't realize the B6/B7 S4's had direct injection...for some reason I was thinking only the RS4 version of the engine did. Interesting.
 

AsianriceX

Golden Member
Dec 30, 2001
1,318
1
0
I didn't realize the B6/B7 S4's had direct injection...for some reason I was thinking only the RS4 version of the engine did. Interesting.

Here's a reference for VAG folks:
http://www.audizine.com/forum/showthread.php?336352-Audi-FSI-Engine-Carbon-Build-up-Megathread

Looks like Porsche isn't immune either:
http://forums.rennlist.com/rennforu...the-new-gt3-doesnt-have-direct-injection.html

I've heard that Mazdaspeed3/6 guys are having the same issues, but I'm too lazy to look that up right now.
 

EightySix Four

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2004
5,122
52
91
All the affected DI motors have exhaust gas recirculation systems. Explains why the GM DI motors have no problem.
 
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EightySix Four

Diamond Member
Jul 17, 2004
5,122
52
91
So they still don't have it? Wasn't sure. My 98 has EGR but I know some later ones don't.

They claim the C-VVT removes the necessity.

Cam phasing also provides another effective tool for controlling exhaust emissions. Because it manages valve overlap at optimum levels, it eliminates the need for a separate exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) system.

I don't think it's the oil that is the problem, which explains why catch cans aren't as helpful as everyone expects. It seems obvious that the exhaust gas is filled with too much shit and there's no fuel to wash it off. Wonder if someone can make EGR delete systems like diesels have?
 
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Bignate603

Lifer
Sep 5, 2000
13,897
1
0
They claim the C-VVT removes the necessity.

If they're passing current emissions regulations without EGR it sounds like they're right. After having to clean out EGR valves on multiple cars I wouldn't mind getting a vehicle that doesn't have one.
 

Ronstang

Lifer
Jul 8, 2000
12,493
18
81
It's mostly oil vapor from the crankcase vent system depositing on the back of the intake valves, iirc.

These vapors are capured and burned in modern engines. Port injection continually washes these deposits off the intake valves.

Direct injection doesn't, unless you have a second port injector, as some mfgs do.

Then they need to have exhaust scavengers take care of it like I do on the cars I build. You end up with a great running engine that has no build up and no contaminating of the air/fuel charge and you can retrofit these to any car....no passing emissions is another issue.