Outboard Marine Corporation began development of such a direct-injected outboard in the 1990s, which would use the FICHT direct fuel injection system. We have all heard of FICHT, but what is it?
The technology behind the FICHT direct-injection system was developed in East Germany by engineer Wolfgang Heimberg in the 1970s. The motivation for this invention was a bolt-on modification to the ubiquitous and notoriously smoke-bellowing Trabant automobile. It was thought that this technology would ‘clean up’ the Trabant as well as make it more fuel efficient. As it turns out, the Trabant never became a DFI Trabant, and Heimberg migrated to West Germany and joined FICHT GmBH to further explore and develop the technology. The name ‘FICHT’ is the namesake of Reinhold Ficht, who, together with his son, founded the FICHT company in 1977.
OMC recognized that outboard engines would, in the near future, need to not only clean up their act but offer consumers the very same reliable running experience that contemporary cars were already achieving. By the late-1980s, most cars were no longer carbureted, and the consumer experience brought by this technology would naturally become expectant on the boating industry as well. And while manifold-injected engines would begin to appear, this design was incapable of offering emissions compliance for the future. But the technology revolution for outboard engines was underway.
1997: Evinrude FICHT was their first direct-injected outboard, with a primary focus on emissions compliance. It would be Evinrude's first step on what would become the path to the E-TEC. |
Direct fuel injection is not a new concept, and its benefits have been understood decades before the technology became commonplace. Indeed, some German World War II fighter aircraft were direct-injected, giving them a performance advantage over their Allied counterparts in high G-force aerial combat. This was not electronic fuel injection, however, as the system was mechanically controlled. And while crude compared to today’s microprocessor-controlled fuel injection systems, it demonstrated dramatic performance advantages across the board.
To Outboard Marine Corporation, the future benefits of direct fuel injection were clear, however, a direct-injected outboard engine had not existed in production up to that point in time, so this would be uncharted territory for an outboard engine manufacturer. There were many pieces to this puzzle that needed to be sorted, and it would not be easy.
One key to its advancement was a development by an Australian company, Orbital Corp., which introduced a system that features injectors for both air and for fuel mounted on the cylinder heads. OMC purchased licensing rights to this technology and developed prototypes, but abandoned the project when a better and simpler DFI design was discovered in the FICHT injection system.
In the mid-1990s, OMC was able to broker a deal for the intellectual property of FICHT GmBH, and this would become the cornerstone of what would develop to be FICHT Ram Injection. Although OMC was at the end of its financial tether as a business at this time and there were some problems to be overcome with FICHT, the venture paid huge dividends in what would be the development of its eventual successor, the Evinrude E-TEC. But that success would not be realized by OMC. OMC as a company was finished, however its pioneering work with direct fuel injection would lay the foundation for Evinrude’s future.
Video: The FICHT injector utilized a spring to return the injector to its closed phase, which limited the precision with which fuel could be regulated. The E-TEC injector would overcome this limitation by the use of an energized voice coil to control both phases of injector operation. |
Like OMC before them, Bombardier knew the benefits to boaters of retaining the lightweight two-stroke engine platform. BRP is well-versed in the development and manufacture of high-performance, lightweight engines covering a broad spectrum of applications. Additionally, BRP had the experience and financial leverage to pursue a revolutionary path that would ultimately change the way people viewed the future of outboard engines.
While the development and introduction of large, four-stroke engines may have presented an easier trajectory to follow, Evinrude was at a point where it needed a product that would be a standout in the industry, something unique, and to provide a real advantage to boaters in terms of fuel economy, performance, and maintenance. They had to develop an engine that would make boaters instantly understand the advantages of owning such a product. In an industry populated by four-stroke engines - all with the inherent weight and maintenance penalties associated with that design, Evinrude chose the more challenging path of advancing the direct-injected two-stroke engine, which would provide the advantages that go along with that engine platform.
BRP keenly understood the advantages of a two-stroke engine versus its four-stroke counterparts. And although there were challenges ahead, the decision to commit to the two-stroke engine configuration was an easy one. Former Evinrude Product Manager, Karl Sandstrom explains:
In the beginning, the E-TEC was little understood by the public and even many experienced boaters. The FICHT engines had a very short life in the retail market, and the unfamiliarity with those engines combined with the dissolution of OMC left open an inevitable question: Is the E-TEC basically FICHT 2.0? Not at all. As a matter of fact, they’re significantly different in a very critical way. And although FICHT technology played a role in its development, we should outline the key difference between these two direct-injection systems.
Key Largo, Florida: Test boats ready for a full day of testing at the 2006 press event for the v6 E-TEC engine launch. Naturally, I gravitated to the triple-engine Wellcraft immediately. |
When discussing the FICHT engines, it is important to understand that the primary objective of that platform was to meet emissions requirements. Since the development of the FICHT technology for outboard engine use posed new technological challenges, the overall user experience of owning and operating the engine (such as engine noise, for example) had to become secondary to the primary goals of achieving emissions compliance.
The FICHT system would usher the two-stroke outboard into California Air Resources Board (C.A.R.B.) emissions compliance, which was stricter than the EPA 2006 regulations, however the technology was incapable of achieving the more-strict Three Star emissions rating that was proposed for the near future. The E-TEC is not only capable of meeting the Three Star Ultra-Clean rating, but it can also meet proposed future regulations.
As far as emissions compliance, the E-TEC is sitting very comfortably where it is, as it is, and is in absolutely no danger of being killed off by emissions regulations. Furthermore, the E-TEC engines are among the cleanest-running outboards in production. The EPA awarded Evinrude the very first Clean Air Award (US-EPA Clean Air Excellence Award) ever to be given to an engine manufacturer due to the fact that E-TEC tested cleaner than the existing four-stroke outboard motors and it also produced fewer exhaust particulates compared to four-stroke engines.
I was able to discuss details of the Evinrude E-TEC engine design goals with former Evinrude Product Manager, Karl Sandstrom. Karl played a key role in setting the parameters for the E-TEC engine series, such as power curve and weight targets, with the ultimate goal of increasing all attributes of the owner experience - not only for the engine’s actual use but its maintenance. Most of us know that there’s much more to owning and operating an outboard engine than just its power and performance.
For those of you that do not know, Karl is a Scream And Fly member that runs an E-TEC-powered STV. And while the E-TEC was not designed to be a race engine, it certainly delivers the kind of power-per-pound that a high performance, lightweight hull requires without sacrificing any of the attributes of easy ownership associated with the E-TEC engines. It really is quite remarkable that this setup would be just as easy to own as if it were a smaller E-TEC engine on a pontoon boat.
The design goals for the E-TEC would not provide benefits in some areas at the expense of compromises elsewhere. With the E-TEC, there were to be no compromises anywhere; the ownership experience had to fulfill goals in every area of operation: power, overall performance, fuel efficiency, reliability, ease of maintenance, and of course, emissions compliance both now and in the future. The goals for ownership experience would comprise every aspect of the E-TEC’s design, which makes the development of new features a much more difficult task. All aspects of the engine had to be perfect the first time, not on subsequent revisions.
Back in 2006, when I had my first experiences with the Evinrude E-TEC, I had the very same questions that most of you did, and still might have: what exactly is an E-TEC? Is it fancy marketing for what is a newer version of FICHT? That was a rumor for years, and it was one of primary motivations for my interest in the research for this article. I would learn that there is so much about the E-TEC that I did not know, and the more I learned, the more I felt the need for an article such as this.
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