Actual, that is not what he is trying to do, based on what he has posted. He is looking at the absolute manifold pressure, as reported by the MAP (Manifold Absolute Pressure) sensor and increasing the fuel flow to the engine in some undisclosed way.My assumption from your description is that you are planning to dynamically measure the requirement for additional fuel by monitoring an O2 sensor in the exhaust. When it senses a lean mixture you will speed up the pump to increase fuel pressure and thus the amount of fuel delivered per unit time the injector is open.
Is this right?
I am much more familiar with aircraft engines than automotive engines, so my knowledge may be a bit sketchy. The mass flow of air in the engine is proportional to the RPM and the absolute pressure of the air. The ECU looks at the two, computes the mass of air and decides how much fuel to deliver to achieve a slightly lean mixture.
If you boost the mixture past the upper limit for the MAP sensor, the engine is going to underestimate the air mass and will deliver less fuel. In the mean time the exhaust oxygen sensor will see too much oxygen, suggesting to the ECU that the fuel flow should be increased. The ECU is going to increase the mixture up to a point, but it has limits to prevent it from going past isometric. It is unknown how it will all play out.
If one starts adding fuel willy nilly, there is a risk that the mixture can get too rich, which will kill the catalytic converter (assuming the vehicle has one).
What else is unclear how he intends to add the extra fuel to the engine. Considering that his story keeps changing to conveniently rebut concerns, I am not sure if we will ever see a straight answer.
---55p