While a lower break pressure will give worse atomization it robs less power from the crank to push the fuel. In testing various injectors I have found the best fuel economy (after adjusting timing for various break pressures) from LOWER break pressures. I believe the trend towards higher break pressures is to lower emissions from a more complete burn at the cost of losing efficiency.To answer the OP, I believe the nozzle is slightly different but many have used the N/A nozzles, myself included, without any untoward effects.
This guy was simply asking if there was a difference in the nozzles, not how it affects his mileage or efficiency.Already on the 2nd post, someone brings in the breaking pressure/efficiency discussion.That issue has been discussed and talked about not only on this forum, but many diesel forums.Trying to figure out if 130 bar injectors are better than 155 bar in a TD motor is pointless to me.There are just way too many variables to contend with when gathering fuel mileage data, especially from multiple people.Unless we all had identical motors with identical compression, identical timing values, identical pumps etc, and we all drove the same roads at the same speeds on the same day...it is just crazy to take someone's word for it as the tell all end all truth.Are there any cold hard numbers and data with pictures of anyone doing this type of experiment? I haven't found it.That means I take it with a huge grain of salt, like a lot of stuff you read on the internet.If you really want to know, experiment yourself on your car on your roads with your driving style.Otherwise take someone's word for it and be forever happy thinking your 130 bar injectors are a MPG upgrade.Hell might as well throw 100 bar injectors in there for like +15 MPG upgrade going by the logic "lower is better" right?
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
Hi Theman53 and others,What are GTD nozzles? We all want the most efficient! With the price of diesel approaching 3.80 a gallon, who wants to waste it.So the consensus on this list is that there is no difference in running with pop pressure, once you account for the advance in timing that the lower pressure gives? It is just for emissions? There seems to be a mathematical basis for having higher pressure, were the German engineers who designed the engine not doing their job?It would make for an interesting test trying various injectors in one engine. I wasn't able to get better than 55 mpg or worse than 54 all summer I was running old bosch 155 injectors, every time it would start it would leave a black spot on the ground at the exhaust. Starting this tank I am running new Chinese un-tuned injectors, their saving grace is that they cost 14 dollars each. So far ok. No black farts on the ground. I am going to get my old ones rebuilt. The weather is now super suck, 5-30 degreesF.
Quote from: scrounger on January 16, 2013, 02:23:39 pmHi Theman53 and others,What are GTD nozzles? We all want the most efficient! With the price of diesel approaching 3.80 a gallon, who wants to waste it.So the consensus on this list is that there is no difference in running with pop pressure, once you account for the advance in timing that the lower pressure gives? It is just for emissions? There seems to be a mathematical basis for having higher pressure, were the German engineers who designed the engine not doing their job?It would make for an interesting test trying various injectors in one engine. I wasn't able to get better than 55 mpg or worse than 54 all summer I was running old bosch 155 injectors, every time it would start it would leave a black spot on the ground at the exhaust. Starting this tank I am running new Chinese un-tuned injectors, their saving grace is that they cost 14 dollars each. So far ok. No black farts on the ground. I am going to get my old ones rebuilt. The weather is now super suck, 5-30 degreesF.higher break pressures DO negate performance..lower break pressures take less power from the engine to pump the fuel to that pressure..just think of it, higher break pressure requires the pump to produce a higher line pressure, and in turn, it takes more power from the engine, to turn the pump..so, in theory, you should get better power and economy with lower break pressures, rather than higher break pressures..higher break pressure will atomize the fuel better, but we run IDI diesels, they have swirl chambers where the fuel is atomized EVEN MORE than when it comes out of the injector.. we can get away with lower break pressures, and larger fuel atomization..
I figure that any fuel that is not atomized just goes out the exhaust as liquid.