tuj wrote:-why were the Germans able to use fuel injection technology but not the Allies?
-how did the fuel injection work on the early engines without computers, pneumatics? like the early Corvettes?
this Bosch-type injection worked like a diesel's only more easily due to the much lower injection pressure needed
the Allies installed DI when useful eg in the Wright 3350 as in the B-29, partly to avoid mixture distribution problems
but many Allied engines eg RR used higher boost, and fueled into the supercharger for charge cooling and reduced supercharging work
(note to self : postwar many of the 12000 military Turbo-Compound versions of the 3350 seem to have fueled this way)
the fabled negative g (really, low +g) benefits of DI were promptly realised by the As with mods to carbs, then came ''injector carbs'
the DI injected very early and slowly, ie completely the opposite of our current interest in DI
though Allied analyses agreed that it allowed higher CR etc in some engines, at least with poor fuel
the supercharger needed to compress much more, ie to rotate faster, with altitude
fluid drive can help do this nicely
the Allies used a 2 speed gear or a turbo
or often had no speed change and throttled the air before the supercharger as needed (to avoid overboost at low altitude)