“Basically you only have so many engine rotation degrees to inject fuel. Increasing size should allow you to inject more in that window. But at what cost. The oem injectors are designed to work with the airflow tumble and swirl in the cylinder head. To work with the fuel pocket on the piston. If any of these are affected more "Wall wetting" will occur. Larger fuel droplets, more stream less spray, etc. This will cause more ring land failure, decreases efficiency, and cause the di pump to have to work harder. Which we all know the oem pump can't keep up with stock injectors how the fuck will they keep up with bigger ones.
Now let's talk Ecu calibration. These cars are extremely complex. We know this. I chance 300-500 tables for a big turbo car to run properly. There is probably 100-200 more I don't need to touch or modify as much that control all aspects of the low power engine dynamics. Now let's shove some fucked up drilled out bigger injectors that are inconsistent and inefficient then spend countless hrs trying to get it to idle, rev, run, good mpg, good transitions, part throttle tq etc etc just like the oem spent millions on doing themselves...
Ok now that we talked about all this cars like the ford GT v6 ecoboost comes with port injection. (Bosch developed), formula four ran the 1.6 ecoboost during a convention I got to sit and chat with the Bosch Motorsports engineers about di injection the main thing to take away is that for power/torque efficiency port is needed to pair with di. These are just some small examples. Most Toyota di cars come with port injection as well (brz/frs)
I can go on and on about what's and why's but my thumbs hurt
For what it’s worth to those that understand/comprehend”
-nobody
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