How to: mk2 carburettor to injection conversion
Posted: Thu Dec 10, 2015 7:45 pm
I'm sure lots has been written on the subject in various places but I'm starting this thread to post my own ideas - and yours hopefully. I'll edit this thread and add in diagrams/pictures as I go.
So, where to begin? For starters all Scirocco carburettored engines have mechanical fuel pumps attached to the front of the engine block that effectively suck fuel to the carb. The fuel supply and return lines enter through the fuel level sender unit at the top of the fuel tank (found under the rear seat base). The picture below is from a mk1 Golf but you get the idea..
For the injected equivalents though, it's a whole 'nother ball game (pictured below). Instead of a sender in the top of the tank, there is a combined sender and "lift pump" unit that pumps fuel out of the tank. The pump supplies a plastic fuel reservoir (19) that sits on the side of the tank - this also has a filter in it. This reservoir also acts as a swirl pot, feeding the main in-line pump (36) which then feeds the accumulator (35). The fuel return line (2) from the engine bay also goes into this reservoir and another line (7) goes from it back to the tank.
As far as conversion goes, the easiest thing is obviously not to bother - just sell up and buy an injection! Realistically though, the supply of carb vs injection cars seems to be 10-1 at times so converting will often be the only option.
Second easiest thing then, get all the relevant parts off a donor car and copy the set-up? Again, not very realistic these days - see my point above about the supply of injected Sciroccos. That said, don't forget that 84-on mk1 Cabriolet GTI/Rivage have all the same parts as a later injected mk2. That enlarges the donor pool somewhat.
My personal thoughts are that the standard late mk2 injection is pretty complicated and the parts are pretty hard to get hold of. Besides which, If you are looking to switch to injection from carb, the chances are you'll be fitting a much more modern engine, e.g. 1.8T - so at least some of the original system can be ditched. This is what I'm going to concentrate on.
The first item on your shopping list will be the lift pump/sender unit. UK ebay prices seem to be ridiculous but they can be found for a lot less on Germany ebay. It also turns out that, with VW being fans of parts sharing across models, the VW Polo, from around 1991-94 had an identical lift pump/sender set up.
(Examples of the price difference - UK ebay Scirocco/mk1 Cabriolet £150(!!), German ebay £50 delivered, Polo unit £29 delivered)
Pictured below is Scirocco vs Polo lift pumps - pretty much identical as you can see.
The Polo uses the same fuel reservoir as the Scirocco (part 19 above) but instead of going round the houses with all sorts of additional crap it has a very compact assembly consisting of reservoir, main pump (a BMW item here in blue) and main filter - all conveniently mounted on a "carrier plate". The blue line here is the supply line from the lift-pump.
As you can imagine, even these parts are becoming "rare" so another option is using a mk3 Golf fuel filter carrier. This can be bolted to the chassis and an in-line pump attached (along with reservoir) as pictured below. Here you see the reservoir supplying the (foam wrapped) main pump which then supplies the filter.
tbc
So, where to begin? For starters all Scirocco carburettored engines have mechanical fuel pumps attached to the front of the engine block that effectively suck fuel to the carb. The fuel supply and return lines enter through the fuel level sender unit at the top of the fuel tank (found under the rear seat base). The picture below is from a mk1 Golf but you get the idea..
For the injected equivalents though, it's a whole 'nother ball game (pictured below). Instead of a sender in the top of the tank, there is a combined sender and "lift pump" unit that pumps fuel out of the tank. The pump supplies a plastic fuel reservoir (19) that sits on the side of the tank - this also has a filter in it. This reservoir also acts as a swirl pot, feeding the main in-line pump (36) which then feeds the accumulator (35). The fuel return line (2) from the engine bay also goes into this reservoir and another line (7) goes from it back to the tank.
As far as conversion goes, the easiest thing is obviously not to bother - just sell up and buy an injection! Realistically though, the supply of carb vs injection cars seems to be 10-1 at times so converting will often be the only option.
Second easiest thing then, get all the relevant parts off a donor car and copy the set-up? Again, not very realistic these days - see my point above about the supply of injected Sciroccos. That said, don't forget that 84-on mk1 Cabriolet GTI/Rivage have all the same parts as a later injected mk2. That enlarges the donor pool somewhat.
My personal thoughts are that the standard late mk2 injection is pretty complicated and the parts are pretty hard to get hold of. Besides which, If you are looking to switch to injection from carb, the chances are you'll be fitting a much more modern engine, e.g. 1.8T - so at least some of the original system can be ditched. This is what I'm going to concentrate on.
The first item on your shopping list will be the lift pump/sender unit. UK ebay prices seem to be ridiculous but they can be found for a lot less on Germany ebay. It also turns out that, with VW being fans of parts sharing across models, the VW Polo, from around 1991-94 had an identical lift pump/sender set up.
(Examples of the price difference - UK ebay Scirocco/mk1 Cabriolet £150(!!), German ebay £50 delivered, Polo unit £29 delivered)
Pictured below is Scirocco vs Polo lift pumps - pretty much identical as you can see.
The Polo uses the same fuel reservoir as the Scirocco (part 19 above) but instead of going round the houses with all sorts of additional crap it has a very compact assembly consisting of reservoir, main pump (a BMW item here in blue) and main filter - all conveniently mounted on a "carrier plate". The blue line here is the supply line from the lift-pump.
As you can imagine, even these parts are becoming "rare" so another option is using a mk3 Golf fuel filter carrier. This can be bolted to the chassis and an in-line pump attached (along with reservoir) as pictured below. Here you see the reservoir supplying the (foam wrapped) main pump which then supplies the filter.
tbc