Hi
I'm reading this debate with a lot of interest. I don't claim to know what F1 is using, but I have experience tuning the injection and ignition of my own car. It looks like some mix up the point of injection and ignition. On road going cars a 60 - 2 trigger is used by most engine builders. The trigger wheel (mostly on the flywheel) has 60 teeth of with 2 are missing. I guess you know how this works? The missing tooth is mostly between 60 to 90 degrees BTDC. In my engine (PSA TU) it is even 138 deg BTDC. I can choose to inject between 138 deg and about 40 deg BTDC (could be even less, but not logical) by selecting what tooth triggers injection. You only need a camsinc sensor, to determine whether it's at compression or savaging top. This is independent from the ignition timing. I'm sure my system is stone-age compared to F1 software/hardware.
Why shouldn't they inject fuel way before 60 deg BTC? (Are we all talking cranck degrees here?). Direct injection doesn't mean it has to be injected on compression stoke,does it?
Just thinking out load. Flame speed also differs a lot with temperature, lambda value and pressure, right? Could they just as well inject some fuel say 300 deg before BTDC during intake, some more fuel later on, which concentrates closer to the nozzle of the TJI, and close to ignition point the last bit of fuel will be injected, which will be higher lambda within the TJI "pre-chamber". They could "play" with this for hours on the test bed.
In this way:
The rich fuel will ignite easily within the "pre-chamber" with low flame speed, but in very close quarters.
Ones the (flame) jets come out the TJI, the fuel will be leaner and flame speed will increase quite substantially.
The lean fuel mixture has a lot more time to develop (300 deg minus ignition advance)
During intake the fuel will be mixed well because of the turbulent the air entering with 3 bar pressure.
Ignition advance stays low, because the flame speed is high (overall).
Also, when all 4 use TJI, why keep it a secret to each other that they do?