US3765380A - Electronic fuel control systems with nonlinearizing circuit means interconnecting the pressure transducer with the main computation means - Google Patents

Electronic fuel control systems with nonlinearizing circuit means interconnecting the pressure transducer with the main computation means Download PDF

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US3765380A
US3765380A US00170565A US3765380DA US3765380A US 3765380 A US3765380 A US 3765380A US 00170565 A US00170565 A US 00170565A US 3765380D A US3765380D A US 3765380DA US 3765380 A US3765380 A US 3765380A
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resistive element
output
nonlinearizing
engine
contact member
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US00170565A
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T Rachel
J Horn
H Wertheimer
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Bendix Corp
Siemens Automotive LP
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Bendix Corp
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    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02DCONTROLLING COMBUSTION ENGINES
    • F02D41/00Electrical control of supply of combustible mixture or its constituents
    • F02D41/30Controlling fuel injection
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F02COMBUSTION ENGINES; HOT-GAS OR COMBUSTION-PRODUCT ENGINE PLANTS
    • F02MSUPPLYING COMBUSTION ENGINES IN GENERAL WITH COMBUSTIBLE MIXTURES OR CONSTITUENTS THEREOF
    • F02M51/00Fuel-injection apparatus characterised by being operated electrically

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  • ABSTRACT In a fuel control system of the type which combines signals indicative of engine speed and engine load to compute a fuel requirement signal, a passive, nonlinearizing circuit is interposed between the intake manifold pressure transducer and the main computing means.
  • the nonlinearizing means is comprised of passive resistive elements in a seriesparallel relationship to provide a suitably tailored output signal in response to a manifold pressure input signal.
  • PATENTEUBET 16 I973 SHEET 2 0F 2 MANIFOLD FIGURE 6 JOHN W. HORN HARRY l? WERTHEIMER FIGURE 5 2 E R U W F Ll U FIGURE 3 TODD L. RACHE L INVENTOR.
  • FIGURE 4 ELECTRONIC FUEL CONTROL SYSTEMS WITH NONLINEARIZING CIRCUIT MEANS INTERCONNECTING THE PRESSURE TRANSDUCER WITH THE MAIN COMPUTATION MEANS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1.
  • the present invention relates to the field of electronic fuel control systems for reciprocating piston internal combustion engines and, more particularly to that portion of the above-described field which relates to the interface of engine sensory elements with the electronic computing means, in particular, to the interface between the intake manifold pressure sensor and the main computing means.
  • each of the above described known pressure-toelectric transducer mechanisms is disadvantageous because of the high cost involved in fabricating such elements to be suitably nonlinear that their response characteristics closely match the engine fuel requirements at any given manifold air pressure.
  • the nonlinearized potentiometer used as the pressure-toelectric transducer is known to have relatively short life in the absence of a further increment of expense due to the constant rubbing of the slider (or movable member) over the resistive element. It is an object of the present invention to provide a transducer element and interface mechanism for converting pressure indications of pressure in the intake manifold to a suitably tailored electrical signal for the main computing unit of an electronic fuel control system.
  • the present invention provides a series-parallel circuit configuration which includes a potentiometer having a substantially linear response characteristic for input motion, which circuit is to be connected with a pressure-to-motion transducer which may be of the convention bellows type to provide an electrical output signal having a response characteristic which is directly indicative of the engine fuel requirement at any particular air intake manifold pressure.
  • FIG. 1 shows a schematic diagram of an electronic fuel control system adapted to a reciprocating piston internal combustion engine.
  • FIG. 2 shows, in logic diagram form, an electronic fuel control main computing circuit.
  • FIG. 3 shows one embodiment of a circuit according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 shows an alternative embodiment of a circuit according to the present invention.
  • FIG. 5 shows a graph of output voltage plottedas a function of angle of rotation of the center top of a potentiometer.
  • FIG. 6 shows one form of pressure sensor having a linear potentiometer useful with the present invention.
  • FIG. 1 an electronic fuel control system is shown in schematic form.
  • the system is comprised of a computing means 10, a manifold pressure sensor 12, a temperature sensor 14, an input timing means 16 and various other sensors denoted as 18.
  • the manifold pressure sensor 12 and the associated other sensors 18 are mounted on throttle body 20.
  • the output of the computing means 10 is coupled to an electromagnetic injector valve member 22 mounted in the intake manifold 24 and arranged to provide fuel from tank 26 via pumping means 28 and suitable fuel conduits 30 for delivery to a combustion cylinder 32 of an internal combustion engine, otherwise not shown. While the injector valve member 22 is illustrated as delivering a spray of fuel towards an open intake valve 34,
  • computing means 10 may control an injector valve means comprised of one or more injector valve members 22 arranged to be actuated singly or in groups of varying numbers in a sequential fashion as well as simultaneously.
  • the computing means 10 is shown here as energized by battery 36 which could be a vehicle battery and/or vehicle charging system as well as a separate battery.
  • FIG. .2 illustrates the computing means 10 in a nonparticularized manner as applied to a two-group injection system.
  • a switching device 38 capable of producing alternating output signals .and receiving as input a signal or signals representative of engine crankangle as from sensor 16.
  • sensor 16 could be a single lobed cam, driven by the engine and alternately opening and closing a pair of contacts.
  • the switching device 38 will be described and discussed as a flip flop since the flip flop is known to produce a substantially constant level of output at one output location and zero level at the other output location in response to a triggering signal which need only be a spike input but may also be of longer duration and a flip flop may be readily made insensitive to other types of signals.
  • Traces 1 and 2 illustrate the alternating triggering input signals while traces 3 and 4 illustrate the time relationship of the two output signals. Signals received on the nontriggering input will, of course, have no effect on a flip flop.
  • Outputs 40 and 42 are connected to the inputs of a logic gate 44.
  • Gate 44 is arranged to give a relatively short duration pulse whenever the flip flop 38 changes state and to produce a constant level d.c. output at all other times.
  • Outputs 40 and 42 are also connected to the inputs of a pair of AND gates with output 40 being connected to one input of AND gate 46 and the output 42 being connected to one input of AND gate 48.
  • the output of the gate 44 is connected to the input of an adaptive delay means 50 which receives, as control inputs, signals from the various engine parameter sensors, as at 52, indicative of engine operating conditions and, therefore, of the engine fuel requirement.
  • one of the inputs at 52 is derived from signal generator 54 which receives, as its input the angular signal 0, derived from the pressure sensor 12 of FIG. 1.
  • the output of the adaptive delay means 50 is fed through an inverter 56 and the output of the inverter 56 is connected to a second input of each AND gate 46 and 48.
  • the output of AND gate 46 is connected to amplifier 58 which, in turn, supplies controlling current to the first injector group.
  • AND gate 48 is connected to amplifier 60 which supplies controlling current to the second injector group.
  • an output signal from the flip flop 38 will occur at one output location to the exclusion of the other. This signal will then appear at one input of only one AND gate of only one amplifier.
  • This signal selectively designates an injector or injector group for imminent injection.
  • the output signal of the flip flop 38 is at output location 40 so that the signal also appears at one input of AND gate 46.
  • the signal from the output 40 of the flip flop 38 also appears at the gate 44 where, assuming the flip flop 38 has just changed state, a short duration signal is passed to the adaptive delay means 50.
  • the adaptive delay means 50 is operative to produce an output after the passage of a predetermined amount of time.
  • This time is determined by the values of the sensory inputs applied at 52 to the adaptive delay 50.
  • the inverter 56 is producing a full-strength output signal. This signal is applied to one input of each of the AND gates 46 and 48. Because of the intrinsic nature of AND gates, an output signal is produced only while an input signal is being applied to each and every input. This then dictates that AND gate 46 will produce an output to be amplified by amplifier 58 to open the first injector group since it is receiving an injector selection command directly from the flip flop 38 and an injector control command from the inverter 56.
  • adaptive delay means 50 produces a signal which is then inverted from a positive signal to a zero level signal by the inverter 56 so that the injection control command output signal of the verter 56 is removed from the input to the ANDv gate,
  • the signal generator 54 is illustrated as a resistive network interconnecting B+ and ground through a pair of series connected resistors 62, 64 and a parallel resistive combination which includes resistors 66 and potentiometer 68.
  • B+ represents merely a source of electrical energy and may be positive or negative with respect to the ground or common potential.
  • the parallel combination of resistor 66 and potentiometer 68 is operative to interconnect the series resistors 62 and 64.
  • the potentiometer 68 is illustrated as having the main resistive portion 70 and a movable contact member 72.
  • Movable contact member 72 is directly coupled to the pressure-to-motion transducer and the motion produced thereby is such that the movable member will follow arrow 74 (counterclockwise with respect to the relative directions illustrated in FIG. 3) for decreasing pressure within the intake manifold.
  • This will provide at output terminal 52, which corresponds to the input location similarly numbered on the logic diagram of FIG. 2, with a voltage signal which is a minimum for zero rotation of the movable member and is a maximum for the maximum amount of rotation of movable member 72.
  • the relationship between the output signal at location 52, V with respect to angular displacement of the movable member is illustrated as 0.
  • the output signal V increases sharply for small movements of the movable member at lower values of V and then increases on a gradual, almost linear, basis up until the region of greatest values of movement of the movable member 72.
  • potentiometer '68 presents a resistive portion which is in series with resistors 62 and 64 and also presents a portion which is in parallel with resistor 66 and the relative amounts of resistor 70 which are in series and which are in parallel will change as the movable member 72 moves counterclockwise relative to FIG. 3.
  • FIG. 4 an alternative embodiment to the circuitry of FIG. 3 is illustrated.
  • circuit elements which are similar to those illustrated in FIG. 3 will carry similar numeral designations except that they are in the series of numeral designation.
  • resistor 166 is in parallel with a portion of the potentiometer 168 as well as with resistor 164.
  • This circuit is also capable of generating the curve illustrated in FIG. 5 and, therefore, represents merely an alternative embodiment which would be used at the choice of the system designer when taking into consideration the specific resistive elements required as contrasted with those which may be commercially or otherwise readily available.
  • Transducer 12 is comprised of a pressure-to-motion transducer portion 12M and a motion-to-electric transducer portion in the form of potentiometer 68.
  • Pressure-to-motion transducer 12M is comprised of a conventional bellows system 76 the interior region of which is communicated to the air intake manifold by conduit 78.
  • Lever arm 80 is fixedly attached to one end of bellows and ends in crank lever 82.
  • crank lever 82 is attached to the rotary shaft 84 of potentiometer 68.
  • Potentiometer 68 is provided with three electrical terminals designated 52, 88 and 90; These terminals correspond to the similarly designated circuit locations in the FIG. 3 embodiment and to circuit locations 152, 188 and 190 in the FIG. 4 embodiment.
  • the circuit portions of signal generator 54 other than potentiometer 68 could be located within computing means with only the electrical conductors which comprise circuit locations 52, 88 and 90 interconnecting pressure transducer 12 and main computing means 10.
  • An engine control circuit for providing an output signal with a value indicative of the fuel requirement of an internal combustion engine having an air intake manifold and a fuel requirement that increases nonlinearly and monotonically in response to decreasing air pressure in the manifold, said control circuit comprising:

Abstract

In a fuel control system of the type which combines signals indicative of engine speed and engine load to compute a fuel requirement signal, a passive, nonlinearizing circuit is interposed between the intake manifold pressure transducer and the main computing means. The nonlinearizing means is comprised of passive resistive elements in a series-parallel relationship to provide a suitably tailored output signal in response to a manifold pressure input signal.

Description

United States Patent [1 1 Rachel et al.
[451 Oct. 16, 1973 ELECTRONIC FUEL CONTROL SYSTEMS WITH NONLINEARIZING CIRCUIT MEANS INTERCONNECTING THE PRESSURE TRANSDUCER WITH THE MAIN COMPUTATION MEANS [75] Inventors: Todd L. Rachel; John W. Horn,
both of Elmira; Harry P.
Wertheimer, Horseheads, all of N .Y.
[73] Assignee: The Bendix Corporation, Southfield,
Mich.
[22] Filed: Aug. 10, 1971 [21] Appl. No.: 170,565
[52] US. Cl. 123/32 EA, 123/119 R [51] Int. Cl. F02m 51/00 [58] Field of Search 123/32 EA, 119
[5 6] References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 3,612,008 10/1971 Beishir 123/32 EA 3,240,191 3/1966 Wallis 123/32 EA 3,430,616 3/1969 Glockler 123/32 EA 3,425,401 2/1969 Lang 123/32 EA 3,651,791 10/1971 Kobayaski 123/32 EA 3,526,212 1/1968 Bassot 123/32 EA Primary Examiner-Laurence M. Goodridge Assistant Examiner-Cort Flint Attorney-Robert A. Benziger et al.
[5 7] ABSTRACT In a fuel control system of the type which combines signals indicative of engine speed and engine load to compute a fuel requirement signal, a passive, nonlinearizing circuit is interposed between the intake manifold pressure transducer and the main computing means. The nonlinearizing means is comprised of passive resistive elements in a seriesparallel relationship to provide a suitably tailored output signal in response to a manifold pressure input signal.
1 Claim, 6 Drawing Figures INTAKE MANIFOLD '"f'JWTEDUCT 18 I975 TIMING PICKUP SHEET 1 OF 2 ELECTRONIC CONTROL UNIT TEMPERATURE SENSOR BATTERY ,dlo
FIGURE JOHN W. HORN HARRY P. WERTHEIMER TODD L. RACHEL INVENTOR.
PATENTEUBET 16 I973 SHEET 2 0F 2 MANIFOLD FIGURE 6 JOHN W. HORN HARRY l? WERTHEIMER FIGURE 5 2 E R U W F Ll U FIGURE 3 TODD L. RACHE L INVENTOR.
FIGURE 4 ELECTRONIC FUEL CONTROL SYSTEMS WITH NONLINEARIZING CIRCUIT MEANS INTERCONNECTING THE PRESSURE TRANSDUCER WITH THE MAIN COMPUTATION MEANS BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 1. Field of the Invention The present invention relates to the field of electronic fuel control systems for reciprocating piston internal combustion engines and, more particularly to that portion of the above-described field which relates to the interface of engine sensory elements with the electronic computing means, in particular, to the interface between the intake manifold pressure sensor and the main computing means.
2. Description of the Prior Art In reciprocating piston internal combustion engines which derive their operating air through an intake manifold, it is known that the fuel requirement is an inverse nonlinear function of the pressure within the intake manifold upstream of the engine valves. The prior art teaches that reactive circuit elements can be combined with mechanical motion producing pressure transducers to provide a reasonably accurate electrical signal indicative of the average air pressure within the intake manifold. In those systems which provide fuel on an intermittent injection basis, capacitive and inductive pressure-to-electric transducers are well known. In addition, it is known that resistive pressure transducers can be provided by suitably tailoring a conventional potentiometer to provide a nonlinear output response with respect to a substantially linear input motion.
Each of the above described known pressure-toelectric transducer mechanisms is disadvantageous because of the high cost involved in fabricating such elements to be suitably nonlinear that their response characteristics closely match the engine fuel requirements at any given manifold air pressure. In addition, the nonlinearized potentiometer used as the pressure-toelectric transducer is known to have relatively short life in the absence of a further increment of expense due to the constant rubbing of the slider (or movable member) over the resistive element. It is an object of the present invention to provide a transducer element and interface mechanism for converting pressure indications of pressure in the intake manifold to a suitably tailored electrical signal for the main computing unit of an electronic fuel control system. In view of the fact that linear response potentiometers having long life are well known in the market place and are available at comparatively slight expense, it is a further object of the present invention to provide a passive circuit interface mechanism which will include a known linear potentiometer to convert a motion which is representative of the intake manifold air pressure to a nonlinearized electrical signal which closely represents the fuel requirement for the engine at any particular intake manifold air pressure.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION The present invention provides a series-parallel circuit configuration which includes a potentiometer having a substantially linear response characteristic for input motion, which circuit is to be connected with a pressure-to-motion transducer which may be of the convention bellows type to provide an electrical output signal having a response characteristic which is directly indicative of the engine fuel requirement at any particular air intake manifold pressure.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 shows a schematic diagram of an electronic fuel control system adapted to a reciprocating piston internal combustion engine.
FIG. 2 shows, in logic diagram form, an electronic fuel control main computing circuit.
FIG. 3 shows one embodiment of a circuit according to the present invention.
FIG. 4 shows an alternative embodiment of a circuit according to the present invention.
FIG. 5 shows a graph of output voltage plottedas a function of angle of rotation of the center top of a potentiometer.
FIG. 6 shows one form of pressure sensor having a linear potentiometer useful with the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT Referring now to FIG. 1, an electronic fuel control system is shown in schematic form. The system is comprised of a computing means 10, a manifold pressure sensor 12, a temperature sensor 14, an input timing means 16 and various other sensors denoted as 18. The manifold pressure sensor 12 and the associated other sensors 18 are mounted on throttle body 20. The output of the computing means 10 is coupled to an electromagnetic injector valve member 22 mounted in the intake manifold 24 and arranged to provide fuel from tank 26 via pumping means 28 and suitable fuel conduits 30 for delivery to a combustion cylinder 32 of an internal combustion engine, otherwise not shown. While the injector valve member 22 is illustrated as delivering a spray of fuel towards an open intake valve 34,
it will be understood that this representation is merely illustrative and that other delivery arrangements are known and utilized. Furthermore, it is well known in the art of electronic fuel control systems that computing means 10 may control an injector valve means comprised of one or more injector valve members 22 arranged to be actuated singly or in groups of varying numbers in a sequential fashion as well as simultaneously. The computing means 10 is shown here as energized by battery 36 which could be a vehicle battery and/or vehicle charging system as well as a separate battery.
The logic diagram shown in FIG. .2 illustrates the computing means 10 in a nonparticularized manner as applied to a two-group injection system. In FIG. 2, there is shown a switching device 38 capable of producing alternating output signals .and receiving as input a signal or signals representative of engine crankangle as from sensor 16. Mechanically, sensor 16 could be a single lobed cam, driven by the engine and alternately opening and closing a pair of contacts. Since this arrangement could generate spurious signals, as by contact bounce, the switching device 38 will be described and discussed as a flip flop since the flip flop is known to produce a substantially constant level of output at one output location and zero level at the other output location in response to a triggering signal which need only be a spike input but may also be of longer duration and a flip flop may be readily made insensitive to other types of signals. Traces 1 and 2 illustrate the alternating triggering input signals while traces 3 and 4 illustrate the time relationship of the two output signals. Signals received on the nontriggering input will, of course, have no effect on a flip flop. Outputs 40 and 42 are connected to the inputs of a logic gate 44. Gate 44 is arranged to give a relatively short duration pulse whenever the flip flop 38 changes state and to produce a constant level d.c. output at all other times. Outputs 40 and 42 are also connected to the inputs of a pair of AND gates with output 40 being connected to one input of AND gate 46 and the output 42 being connected to one input of AND gate 48. The output of the gate 44 is connected to the input of an adaptive delay means 50 which receives, as control inputs, signals from the various engine parameter sensors, as at 52, indicative of engine operating conditions and, therefore, of the engine fuel requirement. As will be readily observed, one of the inputs at 52 is derived from signal generator 54 which receives, as its input the angular signal 0, derived from the pressure sensor 12 of FIG. 1. The output of the adaptive delay means 50 is fed through an inverter 56 and the output of the inverter 56 is connected to a second input of each AND gate 46 and 48. The output of AND gate 46 is connected to amplifier 58 which, in turn, supplies controlling current to the first injector group. AND gate 48 is connected to amplifier 60 which supplies controlling current to the second injector group.
As will be readily apparent, the presence of an output signal from the flip flop 38 will occur at one output location to the exclusion of the other. This signal will then appear at one input of only one AND gate of only one amplifier. This signal selectively designates an injector or injector group for imminent injection. For the sake of example, we shall assume that the output signal of the flip flop 38 is at output location 40 so that the signal also appears at one input of AND gate 46. The signal from the output 40 of the flip flop 38 also appears at the gate 44 where, assuming the flip flop 38 has just changed state, a short duration signal is passed to the adaptive delay means 50. The adaptive delay means 50 is operative to produce an output after the passage of a predetermined amount of time. This time is determined by the values of the sensory inputs applied at 52 to the adaptive delay 50. During this initial period of time when the output of the adaptive delay 50 is zero, the inverter 56 is producing a full-strength output signal. This signal is applied to one input of each of the AND gates 46 and 48. Because of the intrinsic nature of AND gates, an output signal is produced only while an input signal is being applied to each and every input. This then dictates that AND gate 46 will produce an output to be amplified by amplifier 58 to open the first injector group since it is receiving an injector selection command directly from the flip flop 38 and an injector control command from the inverter 56. At the end of the time delay period, adaptive delay means 50 produces a signal which is then inverted from a positive signal to a zero level signal by the inverter 56 so that the injection control command output signal of the verter 56 is removed from the input to the ANDv gate,
46 and the output of the AND gate 46 goes to,zero thereby allowing the first injector group to close. During the period of time the first injector group is open, a metered amount of fuel under pressure is injected by the first injector group.
Referring now to FIG. 3, the signal generator 54, according to the present invention, is illustrated as a resistive network interconnecting B+ and ground through a pair of series connected resistors 62, 64 and a parallel resistive combination which includes resistors 66 and potentiometer 68. As is well known, B+ represents merely a source of electrical energy and may be positive or negative with respect to the ground or common potential. The parallel combination of resistor 66 and potentiometer 68 is operative to interconnect the series resistors 62 and 64. The potentiometer 68 is illustrated as having the main resistive portion 70 and a movable contact member 72. Movable contact member 72 is directly coupled to the pressure-to-motion transducer and the motion produced thereby is such that the movable member will follow arrow 74 (counterclockwise with respect to the relative directions illustrated in FIG. 3) for decreasing pressure within the intake manifold. This will provide at output terminal 52, which corresponds to the input location similarly numbered on the logic diagram of FIG. 2, with a voltage signal which is a minimum for zero rotation of the movable member and is a maximum for the maximum amount of rotation of movable member 72.
Referring now th the diagram of FIG. 5, the relationship between the output signal at location 52, V with respect to angular displacement of the movable member is illustrated as 0. As will be observed, the output signal V increases sharply for small movements of the movable member at lower values of V and then increases on a gradual, almost linear, basis up until the region of greatest values of movement of the movable member 72. This is a result of the fact that potentiometer '68 presents a resistive portion which is in series with resistors 62 and 64 and also presents a portion which is in parallel with resistor 66 and the relative amounts of resistor 70 which are in series and which are in parallel will change as the movable member 72 moves counterclockwise relative to FIG. 3. The precise shaping of this curve then becomes an exercise in numerical analysis of the relative sizes of resistors 62, 64, 66 and 70 to determine precise values of resistance which should be located in this circuit to provide the desired result. The actual shape of the curve V with respect to 0 depends upon the engine type and may be determined empirically for any given engine.
Referring now to FIG. 4, an alternative embodiment to the circuitry of FIG. 3 is illustrated. In this embodiment, circuit elements which are similar to those illustrated in FIG. 3 will carry similar numeral designations except that they are in the series of numeral designation. In this embodiment, resistor 166 is in parallel with a portion of the potentiometer 168 as well as with resistor 164. This circuit is also capable of generating the curve illustrated in FIG. 5 and, therefore, represents merely an alternative embodiment which would be used at the choice of the system designer when taking into consideration the specific resistive elements required as contrasted with those which may be commercially or otherwise readily available.
Referring now to FIG. 6, one form of pressure transducer 12 is illustrated. Transducer 12 is comprised of a pressure-to-motion transducer portion 12M and a motion-to-electric transducer portion in the form of potentiometer 68. Pressure-to-motion transducer 12M is comprised of a conventional bellows system 76 the interior region of which is communicated to the air intake manifold by conduit 78. Lever arm 80 is fixedly attached to one end of bellows and ends in crank lever 82. The end of crank lever 82 is attached to the rotary shaft 84 of potentiometer 68. As is the conventional practice, the end of rotary shaft 84 terminates in wiper means not shown which would slide along a resistor located within the interior region of potentiometer 68. Bellows system 76 is anchored to any convenient structure such as is illustrated at 86.
Potentiometer 68 is provided with three electrical terminals designated 52, 88 and 90; These terminals correspond to the similarly designated circuit locations in the FIG. 3 embodiment and to circuit locations 152, 188 and 190 in the FIG. 4 embodiment. With reference to FIGS. 1,2,3 and 6, the circuit portions of signal generator 54 other than potentiometer 68 could be located within computing means with only the electrical conductors which comprise circuit locations 52, 88 and 90 interconnecting pressure transducer 12 and main computing means 10.
I claim:
1. An engine control circuit for providing an output signal with a value indicative of the fuel requirement of an internal combustion engine having an air intake manifold and a fuel requirement that increases nonlinearly and monotonically in response to decreasing air pressure in the manifold, said control circuit comprising:
an energy receiving input terminal;
a ground terminal;
an output terminal;
means defining an electrically conductive path between said input and ground terminals and including a first electrically resistive element having an electrical resistance that varies linearly along said element;
a contact member movable along said resistive element in response to changing air pressure within the intake manifold, said contact member connecting said resistive element with said output terminal to provide an output signal at said output terminal; and
means defining a second electrically conductive path connecting said contact member with said ground terminal, said second path including a passive electrical resistance in parallel with one portion of said first resistive element and in series with another portion of said first resistive element, the relative sizes of said portions of said first resistive element being varied by motion of said contact member along said first resistive element to cause that output signal to vary nonlinearly and in accordance with engine fuel requirement.

Claims (1)

1. An engine control circuit for providing an output signal with a value indicative of the fuel requirement of an inteRnal combustion engine having an air intake manifold and a fuel requirement that increases nonlinearly and monotonically in response to decreasing air pressure in the manifold, said control circuit comprising: an energy receiving input terminal; a ground terminal; an output terminal; means defining an electrically conductive path between said input and ground terminals and including a first electrically resistive element having an electrical resistance that varies linearly along said element; a contact member movable along said resistive element in response to changing air pressure within the intake manifold, said contact member connecting said resistive element with said output terminal to provide an output signal at said output terminal; and means defining a second electrically conductive path connecting said contact member with said ground terminal, said second path including a passive electrical resistance in parallel with one portion of said first resistive element and in series with another portion of said first resistive element, the relative sizes of said portions of said first resistive element being varied by motion of said contact member along said first resistive element to cause that output signal to vary nonlinearly and in accordance with engine fuel requirement.
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US3908614A (en) * 1972-02-25 1975-09-30 Lucas Electrical Co Ltd Throttle angle transducers
US3948237A (en) * 1973-01-06 1976-04-06 C.A.V. Limited Fuel supply systems for engines
US4210114A (en) * 1977-03-07 1980-07-01 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Air-fuel ratio control apparatus for an internal combustion engine
US4280465A (en) * 1980-07-16 1981-07-28 Brunswick Corporation Throttle control for an electronic fuel-injection control circuit
US4359020A (en) * 1977-08-02 1982-11-16 Daimler-Benz A.G. Preliminary heating installation for glow plugs in air-compressing internal combustion engines
US4683858A (en) * 1985-06-17 1987-08-04 Nippondenso Co., Ltd. Apparatus for controlling engine

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US3430616A (en) * 1966-11-11 1969-03-04 Bosch Gmbh Robert Fuel injection control system
US3526212A (en) * 1966-12-30 1970-09-01 Sopromi Soc Proc Modern Inject Electronic control system for controlling the direct or indirect fuel injection in motors as a function of motor speed
US3651791A (en) * 1969-08-07 1972-03-28 Nippon Denso Co System for controlling fuel supply to an internal combustion engine
US3612008A (en) * 1970-02-16 1971-10-12 Acf Ind Inc Vacuum-responsive voltage generator for a fuel injection system

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3908614A (en) * 1972-02-25 1975-09-30 Lucas Electrical Co Ltd Throttle angle transducers
US3948237A (en) * 1973-01-06 1976-04-06 C.A.V. Limited Fuel supply systems for engines
US4210114A (en) * 1977-03-07 1980-07-01 Toyota Jidosha Kogyo Kabushiki Kaisha Air-fuel ratio control apparatus for an internal combustion engine
US4359020A (en) * 1977-08-02 1982-11-16 Daimler-Benz A.G. Preliminary heating installation for glow plugs in air-compressing internal combustion engines
US4280465A (en) * 1980-07-16 1981-07-28 Brunswick Corporation Throttle control for an electronic fuel-injection control circuit
US4683858A (en) * 1985-06-17 1987-08-04 Nippondenso Co., Ltd. Apparatus for controlling engine

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