Early Fuel Injection with GM blower - NCRS Discussion Boards

Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Jerry G.
    Extremely Frequent Poster
    • April 1, 1985
    • 1022

    Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

    As some of you know i have been working on modifying a stock rochester fuel injection setup for my vintage road race car. i am working on sencing signal linearity and nozzel disc size right now. I called a gentleman that set up a 62 FI unit to run with a GMC blower setup. I was currious how he worked out fuel delivery rates with the blower setup. We had a nice long talk and as always i learned a lot. It seems like really smart people(myself excluded) love to play with fuel injection. As part of the conversation he mentioned that he believes 5 early FI cars were built by GM to test the use of a GM blower mated to a Rochester FI setup.He has some componenets and a photo of an air box race car with a belt driven GM blower. Does anyone know about these cars ? He said a John Camden was a young engineer at GM that did some of the early work. Have any of you heard or seen any of these cars? These were not cars that a private person retrofitted but rather GM testing cars that were raced. i thought if anyone in the world would know someone on this board would. Jerry
  • Loren L.
    Extremely Frequent Poster
    • April 30, 1976
    • 4104

    #2
    Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

    Forget the GM Blower - go to McCullough.

    Comment

    • Dale M.
      Expired
      • December 27, 2007
      • 386

      #3
      Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

      Jerry, sorry I can't help, but I did drag race (late 60's) small blocks with GMC blowers, but with Hilborn injectors. I will be watching you post for and information that you may find. Good Luck on your research.

      Comment

      • Mike M.
        NCRS Past President
        • May 31, 1974
        • 8383

        #4
        Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

        Originally posted by Loren Lundberg (912)
        Forget the GM Blower - go to McCullough.
        although i've got no knowledge of any blown rochester GM experiments back in the 50's, i tend to agree with loren. if one were to mount a rochester unit atop a 471, 671 or a 871 detroit diesel puffer, hood scoop would be a couple inches above the top of the windshield frame. not so with a mccullough.mike

        Comment

        • Duke W.
          Beyond Control Poster
          • January 1, 1993
          • 15672

          #5
          Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

          If you blow into a carburetor (or the Rochester FI system), you have to figure out a way to increase fuel flow in proportion to the inlet air DENSITY.

          Probably some kind of two stage power valve would work, but density does not increase as fast as pressure due to heating of the compressed charge, but if boost is not too high, pressure enrichment can probably keep the A/F ratio in the proper ballpark.

          The Avanti Paxton supercharged engine blew into an AFB, but I don't know how they handled boost enrichment.

          Remember, carburetors and the Rochester FI system meter fuel on the basis of air volume flow and can't correct for changes in density. That's why they run richer with increasing altitude and need a supplemental enrichment system in a supercharged blow-through application.

          Duke

          Comment

          • James G.
            Extremely Frequent Poster
            • May 31, 1976
            • 1556

            #6
            Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

            Originally posted by Loren Lundberg (912)
            Forget the GM Blower - go to McCullough.
            Over 80 Corvettes of fun ! Love Rochester Fuel Injection 57-65 cars. Love CORVETTE RACE CARS
            Co-Founder REGISTRY OF CORVETTE RACE CARS.COM

            Comment

            • Stuart F.
              Expired
              • August 31, 1996
              • 4676

              #7
              Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

              Could I be right to envision a roots type GM blower w/o a plenum, but with the air meter mounted to the top of the blower housing and the fuel components on the sides? (I think I saw something like this in some old GM internal publication).

              Stu Fox

              Comment

              • Jerry G.
                Extremely Frequent Poster
                • April 1, 1985
                • 1022

                #8
                Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                I agree with Duke, the trick is to have a relatively constant boost so the the volume measured is at a predictable density and then match the fuel injector nozzel disks to match air flow. Also the injectors need to be before boost to prevent plumbing problems with a presurized plenum.
                There is a good article about how one person did this with a very nice proffesional installation. its at ;

                www.corvetteshopsandiego.com/1958-corvette-supercharger-build.html

                I don't want to debate the merits of one supecharger system versus another, I was just trying to see if this vast resevoir of knowledge knew of any of these 5 early corvettes with factory(GM) superchargers on them. Has anyone seen one of these cars?

                Comment

                • Jerry G.
                  Extremely Frequent Poster
                  • April 1, 1985
                  • 1022

                  #9
                  Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                  Interesting, Jim therre is also the BOCar vintage race car that used a chevy 283 with Rochester FI and a GM blower mounted in front of the engine driven off the front of the engine. this kept a low hood profile and worked great. i saw one run at Road America . It was a rocket!

                  Comment

                  • Loren L.
                    Extremely Frequent Poster
                    • April 30, 1976
                    • 4104

                    #10
                    Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                    If your "source" has a picture, why not print it? There are WOs that deal with the purchase of McCullough/Paxton superchargers.....

                    Comment

                    • Stuart F.
                      Expired
                      • August 31, 1996
                      • 4676

                      #11
                      Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                      The picture shown in Jerry's link is exactly the blower installation that I was referring to that I saw many years ago in a GM internal pub, or one closely resembling it. Exact same arrangement, i.e. no plenum, rather mounts directly to the lower manifold. Guess my mind isn't failing me after all.

                      Stu Fox

                      Comment

                      • Jerry G.
                        Extremely Frequent Poster
                        • April 1, 1985
                        • 1022

                        #12
                        Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                        Your mind is good Stu. There are several GM internal photos of this type of setup and other configurations using a GM blower in the Ken Kayser publication.

                        Comment

                        • Duke W.
                          Beyond Control Poster
                          • January 1, 1993
                          • 15672

                          #13
                          Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                          Originally posted by Jerry Gollnick (8575)
                          There is a good article about how one person did this with a very nice proffesional installation. its at ;

                          www.corvetteshopsandiego.com/1958-corvette-supercharger-build.html
                          There is some interesting information in these charts. Look at the Duntov cam and .398" lift cam (most likely the '57 to '66 base engine cam) charts. Both use as a baselines what are probably a 283 HP FI and a 220 HP base engine. Compare the peak power and torque to the advertised ratings.

                          Mike McCagh's engine was tested to the same SAE gross lab dyno standards as these engines, so the results are directly comparable.

                          Mike's engine made 364 lb-ft peak torque and about the same top end power as the supercharged Duntov cam engine, but at lower revs.

                          These tests were probably done with production line heads. I don't think Chevrolet understood at the time the dramatic increase in port flow coefficient and power head massaging could produce.

                          Head work, increased stroke, and a better tuned camshaft would have been a much easier way to achieve equal or better output than a supercharger.

                          Duke

                          Comment

                          • Bill W.
                            Very Frequent User
                            • November 1, 1977
                            • 402

                            #14
                            Re: Early Fuel Injection with GM blower

                            Originally posted by Jerry Gollnick (8575)
                            As some of you know i have been working on modifying a stock rochester fuel injection setup for my vintage road race car. i am working on sencing signal linearity and nozzel disc size right now. I called a gentleman that set up a 62 FI unit to run with a GMC blower setup. I was currious how he worked out fuel delivery rates with the blower setup. We had a nice long talk and as always i learned a lot. It seems like really smart people(myself excluded) love to play with fuel injection. As part of the conversation he mentioned that he believes 5 early FI cars were built by GM to test the use of a GM blower mated to a Rochester FI setup.He has some componenets and a photo of an air box race car with a belt driven GM blower. Does anyone know about these cars ? He said a John Camden was a young engineer at GM that did some of the early work. Have any of you heard or seen any of these cars? These were not cars that a private person retrofitted but rather GM testing cars that were raced. i thought if anyone in the world would know someone on this board would. Jerry
                            Jerry,
                            A while back (late 70's or early 80's) at Bloomington a seller (Terry Mc?) had one of those setups for sale. It looked complete with distrubtor and base plate. No idea where it is now. I have pictures somewhere at home. If I remember right the Rochester air meter sat on the left side of a 4-71 GM blower, fuel meter on the right side. Over the weekend I will see if I can find pics. Bill

                            Comment

                            Working...
                            Searching...Please wait.
                            An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because you have logged in since the previous page was loaded.

                            Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                            An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because the token has expired.

                            Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                            An internal error has occurred and the module cannot be displayed.
                            There are no results that meet this criteria.
                            Search Result for "|||"