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the injector of cars pdf

2010 MY Ford Lincoln Mercury OBD System Operation Summary for Gasoline Engines.pdf

August 17, 2009 · Filed Under Ford · Comment  · Tags: , , ,

Taken from Introduction – OBD-I, OBD-II and EMD: OBD-I vehicles use that same PCM, J1850/CAN serial data communication link, J1962 Data Link Connector, and PCM software as the corresponding OBD-II vehicle. The only difference is the possible removal of the rear oxygen sensor(s), fuel tank pressure sensor, canister vent solenoid, and a different PCM calibration. Starting in the 2006 MY, all Federal vehicles from 8,500 to 14,000 lbs. GVWR will have been phased into OBD-II and OBD-I systems will no longer be utilized in vehicles up to 14,000 lbs GVWR.

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Technical Notes on the EEC-IV MCU.pdf

February 2, 2009 · Filed Under Others · Comment  · Tags: ,

The EEC-IV design began in 1978 and was first introduced in 1983 in the 1.6L Escort, Lynx, EXP and LN7 cars. It has gone through several major physical changes, the earliest using a fairly simple two board design with through hole soldered components while the last are more current in technology, showing extensive use of surface mount components and a much more finished and complex appearance. In between, there appears to be a variety of mother/daughter board and other designs. Still, they are all called EEC-IV, although somewhere in its life there was a Ford P/N generational change.

2005 Chevrolet TrailBlazer Technical Service Bulletins (TSB).pdf

January 28, 2009 · Filed Under Chevrolet · Comment  · Tags: , ,

Resume of Chevy Trailbazer, Trailblazer 360, TrailBlazer EXT 370, consists of Components, NHTSA Number, Service Bulletin number of vehicle written above. This document itself does not contain the full technical service manual!

The Development of the Audi 3.6-litre V8 Twin Turbo FSI Engine for Le Mans.pdf

September 19, 2007 · Filed Under Audi · Comment  · Tags:

Within a period of just 15 months, the race engine department of Audi Sport designed and developed a homogeneous direct-injection engine based on the successful engine of 1999 and 2000. Furthermore, all targets such as mixture homogeneity, power output and adaptation to the car’s requirements were successfully achieved within six months The new engines went on to power the two Audi R8 race cars to an impressive victory in the Le Mans 24-hour race in June 2001.