I am a retired engineer from one of the Detroit Three. While not infinitely knowledgeable, I do now quite a bit about the spark ignited internal combustion engine, port fuel inject and and direct fuel injection. There are major errors in video !
At about
3:09 he states that there is fuel "constantly being sprayed on the back side of the (intake) valve".
It is NOT constant. It is pulse whose length varies with the amount of air flowing into the engine. The timing of the pulse can be adjusted so that it can be sprayed on an open or closed valve.
GDI injectors do NOT have a higher "flow rate". They do have a "finer" spray pattern caused by smaller holes.
GDI, by itself, does
not significantly "create more power" or "burn fuel more completely", given the same operating conditions as a port fuel injected engine. Check this "snipet". Higher temps actually mean more HC production.
Variable valve cam timimg does NOT require DI. (
6:35 )
The sample PCV system (
7:50) is very poorly drawn. The inlet air for the PCV system is totally separated from the extracted air.
NO, NO, NO ! Toyota and Ford are going to DI and PFI, because GDI creates "particulates". Tiney particles of carbon from unburned fuel. While these particulates are not currently regulated
(for gasoline engines) in either the US or EU, they WILL BE SOON ! Most of the fuel in a dual injected system greatly reduces these particulates.
GDI can run quite lean, much leaner than a "traditional" PFI engine. DI engines in EU DO run leaner because their (current) emission standards allow them to emit more pollutants under certain driving conditions compared to the US standards.
Ford knows all of this. Ford also knows that marketing sells cars. EcoBoost is all about marketing. Ford could achieve
very similar fuel economy and performance results by just turbo charging a naturally aspirated engine, but the loss of the EcoBoost market term would be devastating.
Are PCV fuel/air separators a good idea ? Sure. A requirement. NO ! Probably a waste of money of a PFI only engine.