What is a Fuel Injector?
Cars made before the 1980s did not have fuel injectors. They had carburetors. These devices mixed air
with fuel, delivering into the combustion chambers of the car's engine. However, they were unreliable, as sudden changes in air pressure
would cause them to fail and require manual adjustment. Fuel injectors have since replaced carburetors. These are electrically controlled
valves which regulate the timing and the amount of fuel passing into the car's combustion chambers.
How Does a Fuel Injector Work?
A
fuel injector works in conjunction with a high pressure pump, bringing fuel from the gas tank to pass in a continuous circuit over
the intake of the injectors. From the intake, the fuel passes through a filter to ensure the valve beneath doesn't become clogged
with sediment from the gas tank. The pressure of the fuel within the injector holds down the valve, preventing the gas from squirting
into the combustion chamber. Suspended at the top of the valve is a small magnet above a spring. Outside the fuel filled injector
is an electrical coil which surrounds the injector, raised about a half inch above the level of the magnet. As the electrical timing
system of the engine decides that it's the right moment to put fuel into the combustion chamber below the fuel injector, it sends
an electrical impulse to the coils. The magnet topping the valve is attracted to the electrical charge in the coils and raises the
valve, unplugging the injector and causing the fuel to squirt into the chamber. With this done, the electrical charge is canceled
and the spring pushes the valve back down into place, closing the injector until the next electrical signal is sent.
What Can Go Wrong
With Fuel Injectors?
Very little, in truth. Many people complain of clogged fuel injectors after months or years of frequent use, and
suggest you use a fuel cleaner to unclog the injectors. While the cleaner works, it doesn't clean the injector itself, as there's
not normally anything wrong with it. The fuel filter at the top of the injector can become clogged over time, and it is these deposits
which the cleaner dissolves. With only a spring and a valve to worry about, fuel injectors can go for decades without needing to be
replaced; sometimes the return spring breaks after being used for years on end.