I have been researching a bit about injectors. I'm hoping to get a bit of "peer review". :yes
My 4 wheeled vehicle is a Jeep Cherokee with the 4.0l. One of the popular mods is to replace the old EV1 injectors with newer EV6 injectors off of a Dodge Neon.
The original injectors on the Cherokee and the K75 are the old type EV1 injectors, this is their only similarity as the Jeep injectors flow a lot of fuel compared to the K75's injectors.
The EV1 injector is a 2 piece body, apparently prone to leaks, and the injector end is 1 hole or pintle. If you saw one going it looks like a single stream of fuel coming out of the injector. The EV6 design is more modern 1 piece, and should be more efficient due to them having 4 holes or pintles at the injector tip, they have 4 streams of fuel coming out of the tip. Better fuel atomization should result in better mileage and quicker starts. If nothing else the EV6 injectors are much newer.
They are both manufactured by Bosch as well as the replacement Dodge Neon injectors. Bosch injectors can be identified by one of the numbers on the side of the injector, for instance the stock K75 injectors are 0-280-150-210. Searching this number will take you to a number sites with the flow information on this injector and many others.
This site is where I have been getting my information from:
http://www.witchhunter.com/injectordata1.php4You'll note on that page that you can click on any of the number listed for a pic and that particular injectors flow rate and resistance. You can for instance look at the K75's injector 0-280-150-210 and see that it flows 152cc's at 16 ohm's. (Note all injectors tested at this site are tested @3bar so that you can compare the flow of each at the same pressure).
Simple enough, now we just need to find a common injector that has a similar flow. I did that for us. If you look at 0-280-155-962 you will see that it is the newer EV6 style injector that flows 154cc's at 14.7 ohm's. This injector can be found on '98-00 Ford & Mazda trucks with 4.0l v6.
I went to the junkyard yesterday and pulled a set, incidentally the only set at my junkyard... Also it is not as easy as pulling the rail on the K75, so plan accordingly.
The only downside I can see is that the Ford injectors don't have the slit cut at the top for the spring clips that hold the K75 injectors to the fuel rail, these are not really needed as the fuel rail is bolted down clamping the injectors in between the intakes and the fuel rail. The flow rate should be really close, if nothing else just a touch richer.
Can anybody think of a reason that these won't work? Anything that I am missing?