Batch fire or bank fire?

-MikeC4
-MikeC4


I found pg 6E3-A-7 has similar info that page is the ECM wiring. 2 injector drivers. 1 for 1357 1 for 2468.
Last edited by Redeasysport; Jan 25, 2009 at 08:00 PM.
I found pg 6E3-A-7 has similar info that page is the ECM wiring. 2 injector drivers. 1 for 1357 1 for 2468.

The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts
-MikeC4


I have a FSM for every C4 year model. I'll go through each year this week and see what the differences are and post any documented difference I might turn up.
Last edited by engle1147; Jan 26, 2009 at 11:37 AM.

I have a FSM for every C4 year model. I'll go through each year this week and see what the differences are and post any documented difference I might turn up.
This is a quote from GMHP magazine
"Most early EFI systems were batch-fire systems where the ECM fired all eight injectors simultaneously. Usually batch-fire systems fire the injectors once per engine revolution. This way, the injectors could be sized small enough to be more easily controlled at idle. Later, sequential EFI systems were refined to fire an injector a few degrees before the intake valve opened. Generally, sequential injection offers more precise fuel control at the price of increased complexity. But on production engines, the benefits are more in the area of emissions and driveability than in performance"
Take a look at the FSM and confirm one or the other I have referenced the pages that prove the bank fire on LT1's It would be good to have a reference to the L98 and finally get this straight.
I have found this and indeed it does show 2 sets of 4 but it appears the Driver is tied togther
http://members.shaw.ca/corvette86/En...agram%2086.pdf
Here is a site showing a Datamaster scan of a L98 unlike the LT1 it only has 1 BLM showing
http://www.customefis.com/faqsite.html
In my FSM it clearly show 2 different switches/drivers I do not see that with the L98 post above unfortunately.
Last edited by Redeasysport; Jan 26, 2009 at 01:12 PM.
This is a quote from GMHP magazine
"Most early EFI systems were batch-fire systems where the ECM fired all eight injectors simultaneously. Usually batch-fire systems fire the injectors once per engine revolution. This way, the injectors could be sized small enough to be more easily controlled at idle. Later, sequential EFI systems were refined to fire an injector a few degrees before the intake valve opened. Generally, sequential injection offers more precise fuel control at the price of increased complexity. But on production engines, the benefits are more in the area of emissions and driveability than in performance"
Take a look at the FSM and confirm one or the other I have referenced the pages that prove the bank fire on LT1's It would be good to have a reference to the L98 and finally get this straight.
I read the article with the 1 BLM showing also...not sure what they are using to drive the L98 engine they recorded but engine in the pic just above it appears to be of a MAP set up....this could be an aftermarket set up....didn't see specific data.
I hear you I'm very interested too....got a thread link for me for Jon's post? Just to be sure your specifically interested in the '92-'93s and the L98's in general right?
Last edited by engle1147; Jan 26, 2009 at 01:23 PM.

I hear you I'm very interested too....got a thread link for me for Jon's post? Just to be sure your specifically interested in the '92-'93s and the L98's in general right?
http://www.cruzers.com/~ludis/1227749schematic.html
http://www.cruzers.com/~ludis/1227749schematic.html
So I've looked up the L98 TPI pulse injection for the '86-'89 C4s so far....they seem to have only one injector driver/switching ground relay for both the odd and even banks. I seem to have missed or am not seeing the "limp" diagram your talking about....what page or section of the '86 FSM PDF/book are you looking at?
So I've looked up the L98 TPI pulse injection for the '86-'89 C4s so far....they seem to have only one injector driver/switching ground relay for both the odd and even banks. I seem to have missed or am not seeing the "limp" diagram your talking about....what page or section of the '86 FSM PDF/book are you looking at? 
tab to injection look at u13 do you see it or am I seeing something else
So now we know how and injector circuit works…..by opening/closing the ground side of the fuel injector circuit. The ground side of circuit is what I’m concerned from the information from here on out. So now we’ll take a look at 1984-1996 fuel injection diagrams…and I think you’ll see why people get confused by terms like “bank” and “batch.” In the diagrams below you can notice the variation of how the fuel injector circuits are grounded between year models. Some years show only one grounding control for all 8 injectors other years show multiple controls, one for each bank of 4 injectors or one control for each injector.










Basic Types of Injection
Throttle Body Injection (TBI): the fuel injectors are located at the throttle body (1984 cross fire setup)
Single Port Fuel Injection (SPFI) simply implies that a fuel injector is located within the intake port very close to the valve location (L98, LT1, LT4 & LT5) Port Fuel Injection systems on a C4 Corvettes can also be Batch, Bank or Sequential Firing injector setups.
Batch/Bank Fire Injection includes TBI, TPI & early LT1s (1984 TBI, 1985-1991 L98 & 1990-1992 LT1)
In a batch fire setup the injector pulse signal is actuated by the ignition reference pulses. All 8 injectors are energized at the same time, once per engine revolution. Because and engine makes 2 revolutions per combustion cycle, each port gets 2 injections of fuel during each cycle. With a batch fire computer all 8 of the injectors are fired simultaneously once for each crank rotation.
In a bank fire setup there are a minimum of 2 contollers; one for each bank. Instead of one firing of all 8 injectors are two firings of 4 and 4 (odd 1357 and even 2468) injectors. One firing occurs one after the other. Same as mentioned above, the both batches in each bank are fired once per engine revolution. Because and engine makes 2 revolutions per combustion cycle, each port gets 2 injections of fuel during each cycle. With a bank fire computer all 8 of the injectors are fired one time for each crank rotation.
Timed Sequential Firing Injection (SFI) (1990-1995 ZR1 1994 & up LTX motors)
Injectors are controlled to deliver fuel just before the inlet valve for each cylinder opens sequentially (one after another) and each injector requires its own controller. The delivery control on an SFI system is done using a camshaft position sensor and or crank/ignition reference pulses. The introduction of SFI in the 1994 LT1 is done at the PCM prom logic level.
Conclusion
Cross referencing reputable informaton I've read it seems that the 1984-1987 & 1990-1993 C4's are all bank fire and only 1988-1989 are batch fire....since they appear to have only one injector contoller for both banks.The LT1 was introduced in 1992 but was bank fire unitl 1994 when the sequential fire system was used.
Confusion
In regards to this link:http://members.shaw.ca/corvette86/En...agram%2086.pdf
The diagram is a simplified diagram for illustration purposes only...wire diagrams that are accurate you'll need to look in section 8A...if you flip to section 6E in most other early FSM books you'll see the same misleading diagram.
References:
1984-1996 GM FSMs
GM STG injector service manual (Service Technology Group)16009.10-3
Corvette Tech Q&A 1953- Present by Dave Emanuel
http://www.fuelinjection.com/portinj.html
http://www.speedscenewiring.com/fuelinjection.html

Ain't it. As I already posted it seemed to me on the 93 (and probably 92) that a Datamaster scan shows different PW and duty cycles for each side and we know since there is only 1 O2 for L98's they cannot have different PW's so I assume all injectors in those fire at the same time (or not?) at the same PW regardless of dual drivers or not. I also assume that the 92-93 balance fuel by banks due to the 2 O2's that allow side to side PW adjustments. As Arte Johnson used to say "Verthy intresting"










