In 1911, a patent was issued in
Great Britain for a unit injector resembling those in use today to
Frederick Lamplough. opposed-piston two-stroke, sectioned. The unit injectors are low down, below the yellow fuel passages, driven by a camshaft to their left and injecting into the centre of the
cylinder liner (pale blue). Commercial usage of unit injectors in the
U.S. began in early 1930s on
Winton engines powering locomotives, boats, even
US Navy submarines, and in 1934, Arthur Fielden was granted U.S. patent No.1,981,913 on the unit injector design later used for the
General Motors two-stroke diesel engines. Most mid-sized diesel engines used a single pump and separate injectors, but some makers, such as
Detroit Diesel and
Electro-Motive Diesel became well known for favouring unit injectors, in which the high-pressure pump is contained within the injector itself. E.W. Kettering's 1951 ASME presentation goes into detail about the development of the modern Unit injector. Also Cummins PT (pressure-time) is a form of unit injection where the fuel injectors are on a common rail fed by a low-pressure pump and the injectors are actuated by a third lobe on the camshaft. The pressure determines how much fuel the injectors get and the time is determined by the cam. In 1994,
Robert Bosch GmbH supplied the first
electronic unit injector for commercial vehicles, and other manufacturers soon followed. In 1995, Electromotive Diesel converted its
710 diesel engines to electronic fuel injection, using an
EUI which replaces the UI. Today, major manufacturers include
Robert Bosch GmbH,
CAT,
Cummins,
Delphi,
Detroit Diesel,
Electro-Motive Diesel. ==Design and technology==