you will ruin the piston rings and rod bearings in short order, perhaps the wrist pin and piston too.
Alright, I'm probably gonna get flamed for this, but...
Would it be safe to unplug the injectors and coils for every other cylinder in the firing order to get better gas mileage for long highway trips; kind of like chrysler and GM do with their V8s?
When I did the valve cover gaskets a few months back my friend forgot to plug in the coils on the left cylinder bank, and I started the car, without realizing it. It idled rough, but over 1500 rpm it was smooth again. it took us about 30 seconds to realize the mistake, we plugged the coils in and all was well. (hopefully it didn't do any damage) This gave me the idea of the cylinder shutdown, and whether or not it would be harmless to run on 4 cylinders. The check engine did not come on nor did it throw any codes, which was weird, but probably because we didn't run it long enough for the ecu to realize something was screwed up.
I would like to do this for long trips to and from school, but something tells me the car will have a fit electronics wise.
Opinions? suggestions? (besides sell the 540 and buy a 525i)
Last edited by dt8068; 10-05-2007 at 11:30 AM.
you will ruin the piston rings and rod bearings in short order, perhaps the wrist pin and piston too.
95 E34 530I V2.37
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Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable.
John F. Kennedy
I don't see how this could do any mechanical damage, the bearings are still being lubricated, right? Does the fuel provide lubrication for the cylinder rings? I could be completely wrong but it seems that the main problem would be the engine having to overcome the compression on the non-firing cylinders, and therefore it might be a useless idea for better mpg.
Do those chrysler V8s open the exhaust valves full time for the shutdown cylinders, because that seems like it would be the only way to justify cylinder shutdown.
-again, flamesuit on.
fuel either lubes or cools down, or both, the cylinders, I'm not positive.
I believe the exhaust valves do open up on those newer cars.
Have you ever driven a car that isn't running on all cylinders?.....It will barely move! lol
No flamesuit necessary, I understand where your idea comes from.
peace
PS: you should be getting 25-28mpg on the highway, which is pretty sweet for a '94 4 liter engine!
[1994 530i/5-Speed]
yea, I get just over 25 mpg highway, which is pretty good for a v8, especially with 200,000 miles.
Its just that I live in Philly, and go to school in Florida, and even though my gas mileage isn't bad, when I head home for summer and winter breaks that 2200 mile round trip is a lot of $fuel$. I would run on 4 cylinders for this drive only because it's boring, and I cruise at a constant speed for 15 hours.
Old motorbikes used to have a decompressor valve to help you kick them up. So yeah you have no compression, spark or fuel. What happens when you hit a hill?
M-B used to make a diesel that cut out cylinders via a cam on the fuel pump,there was no rack to increase the stroke of the pump, seemed to work pretty well, ask anybody charged by an "E" boat! Surely friction will negate any fuel advantages?
scott h had a miss on 1 cylinder for a short whike and the rings were completely shot. How do you figure?
Last edited by 632 Regal; 10-06-2007 at 01:22 PM.
"The gas pedal wouldn't go to the floor if it weren't meant to be there"
Lets say you cut 4 cylinders then those 4 pots are being dragged round by the other 4 as well as them trying to drive the car, if you see what I mean. It should be possible for one of the whiz-kids like jon k to devise a system to alternately cut pots on low load surely?
The engines that selectively shut down cylinders also leave the intake valve closed. Without doing so you are still compressing every other stroke.
There may be consequences to the ECM from unplugging the coils. I don't think unplugging the injectors would damage any electronics though. You're still going to have pumping loss operating dead cylinders so doubt you'd see any economy in doing so.
"The gas pedal wouldn't go to the floor if it weren't meant to be there"