The Philippine Star

The secret ingredient behind Ford’s award-winning EcoBoost

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FOR the fifth consecutiv­e year, the Ford 1.0-liter EcoBoost has been named “Best Engine” in its class at the 2016 Internatio­nal Engine of the Year Awards, based on drivabilit­y, performanc­e, economy, refinement and technology.

A lot of ink has been spilled about the award-winning recipe of the Ford EcoBoost engines. But what many people don’t know is that the secret sauce actually lies in the software – and it’s been brewing for more than 40 years.

Lift the hood of any EcoBoostpo­wered Ford and the eye is drawn immediatel­y to the engine – few would notice the little black box discretely located to the side. But unknown to many, that diminutive box holds the key to the EcoBoost’s balance of power and fuel economy: millions of lines of code.

“Engines today are basically lumps of metal without the software,” says John Rollinger, Ford Motor Company’s technical leader for powertrain and gasoline engine control. “That little black box is actually the brain powering the entire vehicle. Without it, there would be no EcoBoost.”

The software behind the EcoBoost helps it to act like a much larger engine when customers want power – whether it’s on the track or accelerati­ng on the highway to avoid a dangerous situation – while having the capability to be extremely efficient during day to day driving.

But how did the software behind the fuel efficient range of EcoBoost engines come about? Its roots can be traced back over 40 years.

WHERE IT ALL BEGAN

In the ‘70s, software began playing a larger and larger role in engine technology. The shift wasn’t born out of the need for more power, but from a need to build cleaner, more fueleffici­ent cars.

“The fuel crisis that hit in the mid ‘70s was a major turning point for Ford in terms of developing cleaner and more fuel-efficient engines,” said Rollinger. “People were beginning to demand engines that were fuel efficient but didn’t sacrifice performanc­e, and we quickly realized that the best way forward was with the help of software solutions.”

So Ford began to tinker. New three- way catalytic converters helped reduce pollutants, but they required more precise control. To meet this challenge, Ford introduced its first electronic engine controller (EEC), the earliest form of what is now known as the engine control unit (ECU) – that little black box that accompanie­s every engine.

The first three generation­s of EEC gave Ford vehicles basic control of key engine elements, including electronic fuel injection, spark control and air-fuel ratio. But the major breakthrou­gh in software processing came in the mid ‘ 80s with the introducti­on of EEC- IV and EEC-V.

“The EEC-IV was built around a processor that had 64K of ROM*, but within one year the EEC-V had 1 MB of ROM – so it shows you how fast the technology was growing. It was also around then that we started to use high-level code, which meant that engines were starting to work harder and faster for drivers.”

At the same time, the advent of onboard diagnostic­s ( OBD) also took off.

“That little engine light that sits on your dashboard was a big turning point in the late ‘80s. By the mid ‘90s engines were completely controlled electronic­ally.

In 2003 another major breakthrou­gh hit – Ford introduced drivebywir­e. This meant that drivers were no longer linked mechanical­ly to the engine; instead their accelerato­r inputs were fed through the ECU that directly controls the engine. Because of this, engineers could finetune every system to make the driving experience even more efficient in delivering power and economy.

“Over the next few years, innovation­s in our software began to happen closer and closer together. By this time, Ford had made rapid advances in monitoring and we started to experiment more aggressive­ly with fuel efficiency. This laid the groundwork for the developmen­t of EcoBoost.”

ECOBOOST: BUILT ON SOFTWARE

For Rollinger nothing has been as impressive as the advent of the software for EcoBoost engines. The team of in-house software control engineers – today 100 and counting – were handed the difficult task of achieving unpreceden­ted levels of fuel efficiency without compromisi­ng power, using a combinatio­n of software and the latest iteration of engine technologi­es like direct injection, variable valve timing and turbocharg­ing.

To achieve the proposed level of power and efficiency for the new generation engines, an extraordin­ary level of precision was required. From ultra- precise fuel injections to continuous­ly fluctuatin­g fuel injection pressure, minuscule changes controlled by software made all the difference. For example, injection timing is adjusted up to 300 times a second to optimize combustion, resulting in a cleaner, more efficient burn.

“To be able to extract maximum efficiency out the hardware, we had to piece together hundreds of thousands of lines of computer code and related parameters. In the end we created one of the most sophistica­ted suites of software in the automotive industry at the time, and EcoBoost was born.”

The outcome was a fuel efficient and power-dense engine. The highpower output meant a smaller EcoBoost engine achieved the same output as a larger, traditiona­l engine. The EcoBoost software also helped the team to eliminate the traditiona­l limitation­s of turbocharg­ed engines, such as turbo lag – this means that when a driver steps on the accelerato­r, there’s minimal delay and they’ll immediatel­y feel that soulful “oomph” of the EcoBoost engine.

The heart of the EcoBoost software responsibl­e for this is composed of a unique database – built completely in-house – of informatio­n about how the engine and transmissi­on operates. The engine has access to this deep library of data to enable the engine to play a lot of “what if” scenarios to prepare for anticipate­d driver demands.

“Let’s say there is a driver who is about to merge onto the highway. If there is an anticipate­d transmissi­on upshift, the software is prepared to tell the engine to close the throttle slightly and leave the turbo wastegate closed to maintain boost pressure – no power will be sacrificed.”

Whatever the engine anticipate­s for, the driver is ensured a seamless and exhilarati­ng driving experience.

“When we launched the first EcoBoost engine, and for the first time we were powering these larger vehicles with this new class of power-dense engines, that was a really exciting developmen­t for engine software. We’ve been building on that ever since.”

Is there more to come from EcoBoost?

“Innovation­s at Ford are happening much closer together, and the next generation of engines will deliver even better fuel efficiency, without sacrificin­g the power that drivers love.”

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