

Did use long ratchet though
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and a jack underneath
I have two fuel injected cars without an ECU or any electronics. One has a mechanical brain, SPICA, which is not as mysterious as Alfa wanted people to think, and the other is Bosch K-Jetronic, which mechanically measures air against a calibrated flap. Both work quite well, though the SPICA has a couple of entirely too fragile parts (thermostatic actuator is one). K-Jetronic is solid until it leaks, then you have a 78psi fuel leak.DieselSpider wrote:The early cars had engine control units its just that they were spread out and were not computerized. A throttle cable along with a few dash pots here, a thermal switch there and a few switches elsewhere to tell when your foot was off the throttle and you had engine control.mpollock wrote:They'd probably spend all day trying to find the ECU.
Really, then actually made cars that ran without ECU's?????