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    In trying to keep up with emissions and fuel efficiency laws, the fuel system used in modern cars has changed a lot over the years. The 1990 Subaru Justy was the last car sold in the United States to have a carburetor; the following model year, the Justy had fuel injection. But fuel injection has been around since the 1950s, and electronic fuel injection was used widely on European cars starting around 1980. Now, all cars sold in the United States have fuel injection systems.

    In this article, we’ll learn how the fuel gets into the cylinder of the engi­ne, and what terms like “multi-port fuel injection” and “throttle body fuel injection” mean.

    ­For most of the existence of the internal combustion engine, the carburetor has been the device that supplied fuel to the engine. On many other machines, such as lawnmowers and chainsaws, it still is. But as the automobile evolved, the carburetor got more and more complicated trying to handle all of the operating requirements. For instance, to handle some of these tasks, carburetors had five different circuits:

    Main circuit – Provides just enough fuel for fuel-efficient cruising

    Idle circuit – Provides just enough fuel to keep the engine idling

    Accelerator pump – Provides an extra burst of fuel when the accelerator pedal is first depressed, reducing hesitation before the engine speeds up

    Power enrichment circuit – Provides extra fuel when the car is going up a hill or towing a trailer

    Choke – Provides extra fuel when the engine is cold so that it will start

    In order to meet stricter emissions requirements, catalytic converters were introduced. Very careful control of the air-to-fuel ratio was required for the catalytic converter to be effective. Oxygen sensors monitor the amount of oxygen in the exhaust, and the engine control unit (ECU) uses this information to adjust the air-to-fuel ratio in real-time. This is called closed loop control — it was not feasible to achieve this control with carburetors. There was a brief period of electrically controlled carburetors before fuel injection systems took over, but these electrical carbs were even more complicated than the purely mechanical ones.

    http://www.beeautomobile.com/fuel-injector/fiat-fuel-injector/