Not direct injection. The Pro Flo is sequential fuel injection. Here's a primer on fuel injection systems, mainly in chronological order of usage on production vehicles:
- Throttle Body Injection - one or two injectors that inject fuel upstream of the individual runners, and the timing of the injections is not relative to intake valve opening - like a computer-controlled carb.
- Central Port Injection - GM used this weird system in the 90s. It had a single injector and then tubes with poppet valves to deliver the fuel just upstream of the intake valves. I've never even seen this system (only read about it), but it was a cool idea that predated multiple injectors. Cheap ECUs (PCMs in the TJ world) relegated this one to the dustbin.
- Multi-port Injection (MPI) - has one injector per cylinder, injecting just upstream of the intake valves. However, firing wasn't necessarily coordinated with valve opening. So, the first MPI systems were like having a computer-controlled carb for each cylinder.
- Bank-fire or Batch-fire Injection - a type of MPI system where injectors for multiple cylinders fire together, timed per revolution, but not with intake valve opening.
- Sequential Fuel Injection - the one that "stuck" in the production vehicle world (mostly, see #6 below). Each cylinder has an injector just upstream of the intake valve, and it's timed to the valve opening.
- Direct Injection - Mainly for emissions, this system is a special type of sequential fuel injection. It puts the injection point directly in the combustion chamber. Injectors must be much more durable since they experience the full pressure and heat of combustion. The fuel pressure is also much higher due to combustion pressures. The fuel pump has to pump fuel into the cylinder while combustion pressures are rising, and the fuel pressure has to be higher than the combustion pressure in order for fuel to flow out the injector.
The sweet spot, in my opinion, is number 5. I don't like DI because it really puts the injectors in a harsh environment, and requires a high pressure fuel delivery system. I'm not aware of any performance gains from DI. It's mainly an emissions advantage. I don't know what replacement DI parts cost, but I wouldn't want to find out. I'll stick to SFI on my vehicles...
So, there you have it. A brief history of fuel injection. I happened to start my automotive career with carbs and end just as DI was in development, so I got to experience many of those systems. Back in the late 90s, Orbital patented direct injection for two-stroke engines. Two-strokes are very dirty (emissions-wise) engines, and the EPA was really tightening up two-stroke emissions requirements. DI was seen as a way to get there, and many companies, Polaris included, bought rights to Orbital's patents.
In the snowmobile world, Ski-doo and Arctic Cat ended up going with DI. Polaris, on the other hand, developed their CleanFire engines, which are considered semi-direct-injection. They inject the fuel into the transfer port on the engine (two strokes don't use valves). I've been out of the snow machine world for about a decade, but as far as I know, Polaris is still using semi-direct-injection. They've somehow stayed ahead of the tightening EPA restrictions, which is a good thing, in my opinion. When I was there over twenty years ago, we all thought DI was our future. It wasn't! (not, yet, anyway)