rascal wrote:StillIC wrote:1) If the piston has just sucked in air and fuel and is ready to compress it, then, it *isn't* the wrong part of the cycle to let in boosted air. :
I disagree.
The initial air/fuel mixture would be the required ratio and then letting in extra air after the fact will lean the mixture out. Not good for engine longevity..
I am trying to see your point: I think you are saying that if the injector has stopped firing, and all the fuel/air mixture has been sucked/blown into the cylinder, and if then somehow more air gets in past a leaky intake valve, the engine leans out?
But I don't understand in what circumstance this can possibly happen. There is no "after the fact". If the valve is still open, it's still open. It wouldn't close then open again due to a weak spring, because the weak spring wouldn't have closed it in the first place. The boost acting on the valve would determine when the fact (the valve closing) ended. That is, the valve will close when spring load plus cylinder pressure overcame boost pressure.
At BDC after intake, the intake valve is still open in any case. You don't need a stronger spring to ensure it is shut at BDC. At some point just beyond intake valve closure, cylinder pressure is increasing such that it exceeds boost pressure after not too many degrees of crank turn. If, by chance, boost pressure leaked in past the intake valve just after the cam let it close, the engine tuning should account for this, based on speed load characteristics. And again, this is a *good* thing, as it would mean that the cylinder gets extra filling it wouldn't get had the closing intake valve stopped this from occurring.
A general comment: the only reason intake valves exist is to stop the cylinder pressure escaping during compression and during the power stroke. That is, they exist to stop flow in the direction of cylinder into the intake runners, not the other way around.