Throttle body injection was a fairly popular method of cheaply converting the standard intake manifolds used back in the 70s and early 80s to fuel injection. They had some horrible downfalls, like neighboring cylinders not getting the same amount of fuel, and no easy way to solve them. Chevy had their TBI motors (throttle body injection), as well.ZooTech wrote:I have seen "throttle body injectors" made by Ford which were pretty much an attempt to use one fuel injector for all the cylinders by mounting one in a modified carburetor. The injector simply metered the fuel and acted as the main jet.
The problems were solved by mounting injectors in the intake runners so fuel could be metered per cylinder with magnitudes of power more accuracy. More performance could be eeked out of that design by direct port injection, where fuel is injected much closer into the combustion chamber. This makes the air/fuel mixing happen inside the chamber versus in the runners. The injected runners, or "wet runners," didn't seem to stay around for all that long and I don't think they are in many, if any, cars nowadays.
Hmm, my car gear-head origins are showing again...