The more I look at the TJI injection scheme, the more I doubt it is actually implemented like the pictures in the Mahle explanations of it.
https://www.google.com/patents/US20120103302
I think what ever gains you could get from the pre-chamber combustion, would be eliminated by what would seem to me be, really poor atomization and homogeneous distribution in the rest of the main part of the combustion chamber...
What happens to the spray from the injector, impinging on the internal surfaces of that little "pre-chamber" to eventually leaking out the rest of the holes in that extra part? I think the losses from that, would be greater than the pre-chamber. How could the injector spray not just "leak out" of that tiny chamber? How does fuel not build up in the pre-chamber and completely soak the spark plug creating a fouling concern? ? I think a fine atomization from the injector, and a great deal of tumble leading to a high value of overall turbulent kinetic energy right around a normal parkplug would be better in this racing application than the TJI.
All the pressure and velocity of fuel particles, I'd bet, would be gone by the time the fuel leaves the injector and builds up in the pre-chamber. Could the rapidly rising pressure in the combustion chamber cause an even higher likely hood that fuel coming out of the pre-chamber would not be well atomized.....
Until I see real pictures from an F1 engine with that system. I don't think any team has actually implemented it (in the fashion shown in mahle patents and websites.) , and this is a red-hearing...