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Début at Frankfurt Motor Show Audi A3 1.6
FSI

Audi is adding a thrifty sprinter to the range of versions of its
compact sports model, the A3: inside its engine compartment, the A3
1.6 FSI has a four-cylinder engine with FSI petrol direct injection,
developing 85 kW (115 bhp) and 155 Nm of torque.It propels the dynamic
three-door model up to a top speed of 196 km/h; the speedometer needle
hits 100 km/h after 10.9 seconds. But this four-cylinder engine has
more than just sports talents to recommend it.
The 1.6 litre FSI engine also demonstrates potential for fuel economy
thanks to its petrol direct injection technology. The A3 1.6 FSI consumes
just 6.5 litres of Super Plus fuel per 100 kilometres, pushing the
figure down to a remarkable 5.3 litres per 100 km in extra-urban conditions.
This is undoubtedly an unbeatably low figure for a petrol engine,
considering its performance. The 55-litre fuel tank means that a range
of over 850 kilometres is possible without pauses for refuelling.
And the FSI engine treats its drivers to yet another welcome benefit
of engineering finesse: as the vehicle is classified in emissions
category EU4, cars registered as new before January 2005 will qualify
for exemption from motor-vehicle tax in Germany.
This new version, which is going into production in August 2003, extends
the Audi A3 range to three 4-cylinder petrol engines - as well as
the 1.6, there is a further petrol direct injection model in the guise
of the 2.0 FSI. The A3 1.6 FSI with 6-speed manual gearbox as standard
will cost € 20,100 in Germany.
Motor sport expertise
In technical terms, the new engine for the A3 is closely related
to the racing engine that powered the Audi R8 racing cars to victory
at the Le Mans 24 Hours in 2001 and 2002.
Here again it was a combination of more power from less fuel that
demonstrated Audi's technological lead in a very literal sense. With
lower fuel consumption than conventional racing engines, the cars
were able to put in an extra lap between refuelling stops.
Fuel injection under high pressure
The term "petrol direct injection" highlights the most
telling feature which distinguishes these engines from conventional
petrol engines. In contrast to the conventional indirect injection
principle, the fuel is injected directly into the combustion chamber.
The injector, located on the admission side in the cylinder head,
is served by a high-pressure pump driven by the camshaft and a pressure
reservoir shared by all cylinders - the common rail system.
The injector regulates fuel delivery with millisecond precision, at
injection pressures of up to 110 bar. By way of comparison, an indirect
injection system operates at a maximum of four bar.
There is a further special feature on the admission side - the tumble
flap. This can be adjusted to two different positions on the 1.6 FSI
engine, thus specifically influencing the movement of the incoming
air.
This paves the way for two different operating modes as the very basis
of the FSI principle's versatility: homogeneous-charge and stratified-charge
operation. Depending on the engine speed, load status and accelerator
pedal position, the engine electronics always select the optimum mode
- without the driver even noticing.
Homogeneous-charge operation at full load
A conventional engine with indirect fuel injection establishes
an ignitable air-fuel mixture of a ratio of 14.7:1 (lambda = 1) throughout
the entire combustion chamber. An FSI engine likewise operates in
this "homogeneous" mode whenever it is called upon to deliver
a high power output.
At full load, the fuel is injected synchronously with the air intake
phase. This fills the combustion chamber evenly. By virtue of the
precision injection process, the extremely fine atomisation and the
internal cooling effect when the fuel vaporises directly inside the
combustion chamber, the FSI engine can run at a higher compression
ratio than an engine with an indirect injection system. This permits
greater efficiency.
Stratified charge: maximum fuel saving
The crucial feature of the new engine that paves the way for fuel-saving,
however, is stratified-charge operation at partial loads.
In this operating mode, fuel is not injected until the compression
phase. It is now injected directly into the air in the combustion
chamber, in which a tumbling movement is induced by the diagonal position
of the tumble flap and the special shape of the piston crown.
This specific tumbling movement makes it possible to establish the
required stratification: precisely at the point of ignition, the cloud
of fuel and air which fills only part of the combustion chamber reaches
the spark plug, permitting efficient combustion in spite of the excess
air in the remainder of the combustion chamber
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