riff_raff wrote:All SI recip engines require some form of intake air throttling, whether the function is performed by variable intake valve control or by an intake manifold butterfly.
Deactivating cylinders eliminates much of their pumping losses, but it does not eliminate all of their mechanical friction losses.
I'm not disagreeing with anything in the post ...... but ......
stratified charge SI engines, broadly speaking, do not have intake throttling (a little might help them ?)
early IC engines were mostly, broadly speaking, stratified charge SI engines
eg those fuelled on gas (not gasoline)
others ran on oil, both had pre spark-era externally energised 'hot spot' ignition
as did early gasoline engines (they were nominally homogeneous charge)
carburation (and throttling) as we know them did not really exist then
the fuel was a lighter fraction than ours, with a wider range of combustability, so precise a:f ratio was unimportant
and engines had less need for partial power operation other than idle (not having much max power anyway)
and were set and governed to run at intermediate power, the accelerator not being a throttle, but a pedal override of the governer
the introduction of (timed) SI was hugely valuable to control power by driver control of ignition timing
until and after proper carburation (and associated throttling) became available
cars had manual (driver) controlled ign timing till near WW2 ?
some (British) motorcycles had this even in 1960s
so it's amusing to see ignition retardation being reinvented in 21st century F1
an F1 engine needs less throttling (to reduce massflow and thermal efficiency) for partial powers than does a normal engine
because its truly extreme valve timing anyway gives poor massflow and TE (at lower rpm the inlet flow is in part reversed)
regarding throttle plate position in F1
surely we must fuel at the throttling point ? (for good dispersion/droplet size at the lower velocities/turbulence)
we wouldn't/couldn't have throttling at the duct mouth (behind the drivers head)
because we'd need a flame trap to prevent explosion, and the cylinders a:f ratios would vary
an airbox induction system when limited in size and/or shape has non-ideal impacts on engine power curve
as Dr Blair's work for Moto GP (predicting these and their treatment with variously phased firing via crankshaft design)
having neither '3-way' catalysts or VVT, F1 is easily and happily deactivating cylinders and benefitting in efficiency
such benefit is in principle available (without needing VVT) in road cars, cold cylinder wear avoidable by dispersed deactivation
there's not much point in having 3 way cats on the road ? especially when (as in Europe) 55% of road vehicle use is Diesel
(3 way cats also prevent us using a lean mixture, the first and easiest way of reducing pumping and efficiency loss from throttling)
EDIT I posted 2 way cats but meant 3 way cats, honest !
the point being that a 2 way allows a lean mixture
(if cylinders are deactivated by zero fuelling and valves continue working the exhaust would have oxygen, useless for 3 way catalysis)