SAE Technical Paper Series 1982
DOI: 10.4271/820156
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Cylinder Cutoff of 4-Stroke Cycle Engines at Part-Load and Idle

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Cited by 10 publications
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“…Fuel economy improvements are attributed to reductions in pumping work and an increase in gross indicated thermal efficiency [11]. Reported improvements in fuel economy are significant, ranging from a maximum of 30-40% for a 2.0l V6 carburetted petrol engine [12] when deactivating a bank of cylinders at low loads, to 25% for the 1.4l TSI [2] at low loads, and 6-10% for a 1.4l four-cylinder turbocharged engine with one or two cylinders deactivated [13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Fuel economy improvements are attributed to reductions in pumping work and an increase in gross indicated thermal efficiency [11]. Reported improvements in fuel economy are significant, ranging from a maximum of 30-40% for a 2.0l V6 carburetted petrol engine [12] when deactivating a bank of cylinders at low loads, to 25% for the 1.4l TSI [2] at low loads, and 6-10% for a 1.4l four-cylinder turbocharged engine with one or two cylinders deactivated [13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Fuel economy improvements are attributed to reductions in pumping work and an increase in gross indicated thermal efficiency [11]. Reported improvements in fuel economy are significant, ranging from a maximum of 30-40% for a 2.0l V6 carburetted petrol engine [12] when deactivating a bank of cylinders at low loads, to 25% for the 1.4l TSI [2] at low loads, and 6-10% for a 1.4l four-cylinder turbocharged engine with one or two cylinders deactivated [13].The application of cylinder deactivation to three cylinder, 1 litre engines is a departure from the norm and present challenges which include the uncertain effects on thermal behaviour of deactivating one of three cylinders. An investigation of these effects through computational modelling and experimental studies is reported in the paper.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%