letdown427
Golden Member
- Jan 3, 2006
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Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
Originally posted by: dug777
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
:laugh:
Indeed. I've had my engine die at speed a few times (spark problems, and run out of fuel), so it's left me coasting, in gear, with no fuel entering the engine, and no spark. I've still coasted an extremely long way in gear before coming to a haltSo what you say is a (nonsensical and parodical(? parodic?) joke.
![]()
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: dug777
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
:laugh:
Indeed. I've had my engine die at speed a few times (spark problems, and run out of fuel), so it's left me coasting, in gear, with no fuel entering the engine, and no spark. I've still coasted an extremely long way in gear before coming to a haltSo what you say is a (nonsensical and parodical(? parodic?) joke.
![]()
You STOPPED because there was NO FULE!! You, sir, are PWNED!
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
Read the whole thread...
No, the patent you cite covers a transition to FULL CUT-OFF. That's 100% fuel stoppage. Under engine braking, instead of just shutting everything off at once, it shuts down "gradually" (in this case, "gradually" being over perhaps one second rather than instantly), but it still completely shuts down fuel flow. The patent does NOT indicate that fuel is never cut-off, only that the transition between normal flow and complete shut-off is gradual and not instantaneous in order to smooth out that transition.Originally posted by: Tom
Your own reply corroborates my statement. And disproves the opposite claim. Even if the duration is brief, which is information you supply, not me, then the fact is a car with such a system would consume fuel, perhaps a very small amount, during engine braking.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Unless you're buying cars made in a third-world country, all modern FI vehicles have a fuel cut-off under engine braking. It's a "free" way for the auto maker to increase fuel mileage for a vehicle.Originally posted by: Tom
Yes, I know. My point is, assuming some cars use something like this, then it isn't true that all cars with EFI cut off fuel delivery entirely during engine braking, which a great deal of posts in this thread insists is the case.
There are differing methods for resuming fuel injection when the threshold RPM has been breached, but any modern FI car will cut off fuel under deceleration.
The pattent only addresses the brief (less than one second) transition period from normal fuel flow to fuel cut-off. It actually proves that any car using your patent does have a 100% cut-off mode since the pattent covers only the transition to and from complete fuel cut-off.
ZV
And before you interject that the amount is trivial, by the same token this entire discussion is about a trivial difference in fuel consumption, except for those lucky few who only ever drive downhill.
Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
No, the patent you cite covers a transition to FULL CUT-OFF. That's 100% fuel stoppage. Under engine braking, instead of just shutting everything off at once, it shuts down "gradually" (in this case, "gradually" being over perhaps one second rather than instantly), but it still completely shuts down fuel flow. The patent does NOT indicate that fuel is never cut-off, only that the transition between normal flow and complete shut-off is gradual and not instantaneous in order to smooth out that transition.Originally posted by: Tom
Your own reply corroborates my statement. And disproves the opposite claim. Even if the duration is brief, which is information you supply, not me, then the fact is a car with such a system would consume fuel, perhaps a very small amount, during engine braking.Originally posted by: Zenmervolt
Unless you're buying cars made in a third-world country, all modern FI vehicles have a fuel cut-off under engine braking. It's a "free" way for the auto maker to increase fuel mileage for a vehicle.Originally posted by: Tom
Yes, I know. My point is, assuming some cars use something like this, then it isn't true that all cars with EFI cut off fuel delivery entirely during engine braking, which a great deal of posts in this thread insists is the case.
There are differing methods for resuming fuel injection when the threshold RPM has been breached, but any modern FI car will cut off fuel under deceleration.
The pattent only addresses the brief (less than one second) transition period from normal fuel flow to fuel cut-off. It actually proves that any car using your patent does have a 100% cut-off mode since the pattent covers only the transition to and from complete fuel cut-off.
ZV
And before you interject that the amount is trivial, by the same token this entire discussion is about a trivial difference in fuel consumption, except for those lucky few who only ever drive downhill.
ZV
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: BD2003
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Please tell me you are not serious.
Read the whole thread...
I did. Just because there are other idiots that agree with you don't make you any less wrong.
Your car will NOT stall and come to a dead stop on a hill when you run out of gas.
I'd forgive your ignorance if there wasnt a weeks worth of ignorance built up in this thread already.
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
Skoorb lives again! :laugh:Originally posted by: Nyati13
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
The tachometer only measures the rotation of the crankshaft, it does not directly measure fuel usage and does not indicate fuel usage.
Idle on most cars is 800-1000 RPM. And your "Fact" is dead wrong, and purely uninformed opinion. FACT! If the engines fuel supply is cut off while moving and in gear, the drivetrain rotation will drive the engine, and all accessories, alternator, and power options will remain powered. FACT! The lack of fuel while in gear will cause the vehicle to de-accelerate at a certain rate determined by the weight of the vehicle/the angle of the surface being traversed/and the gear ratio involved. This does not equal immediate "DEAD STOP" in the real world.
It is a fact beyond dispute that many (most even) cars do completely shut off fuel delivery when off throttle and in gear. Other cars mostly shut off fuel supply (to levels below what is needed to idle), and some other much older cars return throttle to idle.
Originally posted by: randay
I vote DivideBYZero for either BAN or title change to "Supreme Necro Overlord".
Originally posted by: Vic
Skoorb lives again! :laugh:Originally posted by: Nyati13
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
I find it hard to beleive that no gas is used, the tachometer is reading 1000 rpms not 0.
Down hill in neutral would even cause your car to accelerate, while only using gas to keep the engine at idle, which is being used anyway, to keep the motor running, head out on the highway, looking for adventure, or whatever comes my way.
Fact. If your car was ever cut off from fuel it would stall. Idle is on most cars at 1200-1600 RPM. If kept in gear and it shuts the fuel off then the car would chug rally bad for not having that equal momentum or pressure on the pistons. IE: Coast down hill and turn your car off and see what happends. That would be like shutting off the gas and see how fast no real matter the grade your car slows down to a stop.
A DEAD STOP.
The tachometer only measures the rotation of the crankshaft, it does not directly measure fuel usage and does not indicate fuel usage.
Idle on most cars is 800-1000 RPM. And your "Fact" is dead wrong, and purely uninformed opinion. FACT! If the engines fuel supply is cut off while moving and in gear, the drivetrain rotation will drive the engine, and all accessories, alternator, and power options will remain powered. FACT! The lack of fuel while in gear will cause the vehicle to de-accelerate at a certain rate determined by the weight of the vehicle/the angle of the surface being traversed/and the gear ratio involved. This does not equal immediate "DEAD STOP" in the real world.
It is a fact beyond dispute that many (most even) cars do completely shut off fuel delivery when off throttle and in gear. Other cars mostly shut off fuel supply (to levels below what is needed to idle), and some other much older cars return throttle to idle.
Originally posted by: Baked
Does the pistons move when your car's moving?
Originally posted by: bwatson283
Originally posted by: Baked
Does the pistons move when your car's moving?
The pistons are always moving, that is what an internal compustion engine is. Pistions move to create combustion and those explosions are what keep the engine on.
Tell you what, next time you fill up, get 5litres spare in a jerry can.Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: bwatson283
Originally posted by: Baked
Does the pistons move when your car's moving?
The pistons are always moving, that is what an internal compustion engine is. Pistions move to create combustion and those explosions are what keep the engine on.
See? This guy knows what he's on about. Pistons move and they need fuel to keep them on. /Thread.
Originally posted by: letdown427
Tell you what, next time you fill up, get 5litres in a jerry can.Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: bwatson283
Originally posted by: Baked
Does the pistons move when your car's moving?
The pistons are always moving, that is what an internal compustion engine is. Pistions move to create combustion and those explosions are what keep the engine on.
See? This guy knows what he's on about. Pistons move and they need fuel to keep them on. /Thread.
Run your car out of fuel. Leave it in gear. Notice the rpms are still up there? And they slowly go down as the car coasts to a halt? Yeah exactly.
/Thread.