Changing the filters and checking for flapping or deteriorated pipes is the easy bit. Checking the calibration is slightly more difficult but can be done by looking at the long and short term trims when running on petrol and comparing them with running on gas. If you detect a problem here, then it really does need to go to someone that has the software and knowledge to set it up properly. If you don't have a means of checking the trims, there is a crude way of doing it using the trip computer, but more of that later.
To understand how the gas system works in a car, you need a basic understanding of how the petrol injection system works so we’ll start there. Petrol is pumped from the tank to the engine where it goes through a pressure regulator. This keeps the fuel at a constant set pressure and returns excess fuel back to the tank (pressure regulator is on the back of the fuel rail on a GEMS but integrated with the in-tank fuel pump on a Thor). The fuel under pressure sits at the back of the fuel injectors which are nothing more complicated than electrically operated valves. Think of them like bathtaps but capable of being turned on and off very quickly.
The injectors are switched on and off, to open and close them, by the cars petrol ECU. It takes signals from various sensors, engine temperature, intake air temperature, throttle position, engine revs and, by using an internally programmed ‘map’ knows how much fuel is needed at any one time. The amount of fuel is altered by altering the amount of time that the injectors stay open for. At idle, it can be as short a time as 2mS (2 milliseconds, or 0.002 of a second), at full throttle under load, it can be as long as 15mS. As the fuel is at a set, known pressure, the length of time that the injectors are open for directly affects the quantity of fuel injected.
As a check, the engine is fitted with lambda sensors in the exhaust system. These measure the amount of oxygen in the exhaust gasses and can tell if the air/fuel ratio (the ‘mixture’) is correct or not. If it isn’t, the ECU will ‘fine tune’ the length of time the injectors are open for to keep the mixture correct and the engine running at maximum efficiency. This is the short term fuel trim but if there is a problem somewhere that causes the amount of fine tuning to be greater than a preset amount, the ECU alters the long term fuel trim so the short term is always flipping between a bit rich and a bit lean (the positive and negative fuel trims) So if the air filter gets a bit clogged, the mixture will be permanently rich (not enough air) so the short term trims will be going constantly negative to reduce the amount of fuel and get the fuel/air ratio correct again. This will cause the long term trims to go a little negative so the short term trims are back working either side of zero.
When running on gas, the pulses that would be used to open and close the petrol injectors are used to fire he LPG injectors instead. Again, you have a preset pressure so it is only the injector open tines that vary. However, due to them being a bit clunky, not as fast responding as petrol injectors and are injecting a vapour not a liquid, they need to be open for slightly longer that the petrol injectors would. Ideally they need to open between 1.2 and 1.5 times the duration of the petrol injectors. So if the petrol injectors need to be open for 3mS at idle and 15mS are full throttle, they'll need to be open for around 3.9mS at idle and 19mS at full throttle. This is done by the calibration in the LPG controller. It has a map stored and adds the additional time to the pulses from the petrol ECU and uses that to hold the LPG injectors open for the correct amount of time. But, if the calibration is wrong and instead of adding the required 4mS at full throttle, it is only adding 2mS, the mixture will be lean. This will be detected by the lambda sensors and fed back to the petrol ECU which will adjust the fuel trims, initially the short and then the long term so instead of a 15mS pulse, it sends a 17mS one to get the mixture correct again by giving a 19mS pulse duration.
So you can see that by looking at the long and short term trims when running on petrol and again when running on gas, you can see if the calibration is correct. If you've no way of looking at the trims, you can use the trip computer. The trip computer doesn't measure the amount of fuel you use but calculates it from the fuel trims so can give a good indication of something being correct or not. With the car running on petrol, reset the trip computer and go for a drive. Preferably 20 or 30 miles of mixed driving and at the end check the mpg figure it is displaying. Then reset the trip computer and do the exact same journey only running on gas this time. The displayed mpg figure should be the same. If it says you are doing more miles per gallon, then the petrol ECU is having to lean the mixture off (make the fuel trims go negative) so the gas ECU is adding too large a correction, if it says you are doing less miles per gallon, the petrol ECU is having to increase the petrol injector pulse lengths to get the mixture correct (make the fuel trims go positive) because the LPG controller isn't adding enough.
Simple really......
Peterborough, Cambs
- '93 Range Rover Classic 4.2 LSE, sold
- '97 Range Rover 4.0SE, in Oxford Blue with a sort of grey/blue leather interior sold as two is plenty.....
- '96 4.6HSE Ascot - now sold
- '98 4.0SE in Rioja Red
'98 Ex-Greater Manchester Police motorway patrol car, Range Rover P38 4.0, in Chawton white - the everyday car
All running perfectly on LPG
- Proud to be a member of the YCHJCYA2PDTHFH club.