syncrosimon wrote:
When the ignition was set to 5 degs I noticed that the DJ would run rich at a cruise, up to lambda 1.10, ( I have an exhaust lambda gauge fitted) since reverting back to 10 degs she now cruises at lambda 1 and I am getting the economy.
Not here to nitpick, but thought I might point out the lambda 1.1 is lean at 16.17 AFR.
The lambda number is a multiple of the air component at stoichiometry (aka "lambda") for your particular fuel. Fuels vary as to how much air by mass they should be mixed at for complete, or stoichiometric, combustion, wherein all the hydrocarbons and all the available oxygen are consumed in the combustion process. Gasoline has a stoich AFR of about 14.7:1, but straight ethanol is stoichiometric at about 9.8:1 air-to-fuel by mass.
So if you read the WBO2 meter as lambda (you can set most of them to read in AFR instead), the air component of the air:fuel ratio is, for gasoline, 14.7 multiplied by the lambda number, so in this case the air component is 14.7 x 1.1 = 16.17. Numbers higher than 1 have more air than a stoichiometric mixture so they are lean, numbers lower than 1 have less air so they are rich. The fuel component in the ratio is always the second number and is always 1.
So going in the other direction, a rich high-load gasoline mixture such as 12.5:1 is a lambda 0.85 (12.5/14.7 = 0.85).
I suppose your entry must have been a typo, Simon, just thought I should set the facts straight since some people were wanting to learn about lambda. Wouldn't want them getting off on the wrong foot.