Originally Posted by dieselmiata
(Post 1118372)
What is continuity?
You might be asking, "What is continuity?" But don't worry, it's quite simple! Continuity means, are two things electrically connected. So if two electronic parts are connected with a wire, they are continuous. If they are connected with cotton string, they are not: while they are connected, the cotton string is not conductive. You can always use a resistance-tester (ohmmeter) to figure out if something is connected because the resistance of wires is very small, less than 100 ohms, usually. However, continuity testers usually have a piezo buzzer which beeps. This makes them very useful when you want to poke at a circuit and need to focus on where the probes are instead of staring at the meter display. For some basic circuits you can just look to see where the wires go to determine continuity but it's always wise to use a multimeter. Sometimes wires break or you're tired and can't easily follow all the PCB traces. I use continuity check all the time! What is it good for? Continuity is one of the most important tests. Here are some things it is good for Determine if your soldering is good. If your solder joint it is a cold solder connection it will appear connected but in actually it is not! This can be really frustrating if you are not experienced in visually detecting cold solder joints Determine if a wire is broken in the middle. Power cords and headphone cables are notorious for breaking inside the shielding, it appears as if the cable is fine but inside the wires have been bent so much they eventually broke. Making sure something isn't connected. Sometimes a solder joint will short two connections. Or maybe your PCB has mistakes on it and some traces were shorted by accident. Reverse-engineering or verifying a design back to a schematic Remember! You can only test continuity when the device you're testing is not powered. Continuity works by poking a little voltage into the circuit and seeing how much current flows, its perfectly safe for your device but if its powered there is already voltage in the circuit, and you will get incorrect readings Always test to make sure your meter is working before starting the test by brushing the two tips together, and verifying you hear the beep. Maybe the battery is low or its not in the right mode. Continuity is non-directional, you can switch probes and it will be the same. If you are testing two points in a circuit and there is a (big) capacitor between those points you may hear a quick beep and then quiet. That's because the voltage the meter is applying to the circuit is charging up the capacitor and during that time the meter 'thinks' its continuous (essentially) Small resistors (under 100 ohms or so) and also all inductors will seem like short circuits to a multimeter because they are very much like wires. Likewise, continuity doesn't mean "short" it just means very very low resistance. For example, if you have a circuit that draws an Amp from a 5V supply, it will appear to be a 5Ω resistor. If you measure that with your meter it will think its a short circuit, but really its just a high-drain circuit. |
Just checking. You never know someone's electrical experience over the internet.
It still sounds like the wiring is possibly incorrect, or shorting out somewhere. |
Originally Posted by dieselmiata
(Post 1118358)
Are you sure you have the IAT wired up properly? Did you test the wires for continuity and see if one is broken somewhere in the line?
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Originally Posted by dieselmiata
(Post 1118385)
Just checking. You never know someone's electrical experience over the internet.
It still sounds like the wiring is possibly incorrect, or shorting out somewhere. |
Every wire diagram I find for my ms, refers to a 37 pin connector. mine has two plugs that my factory harness uses. one has 27 (I think) the other one is small and I forget how many it has. are the diagrams combining to two?? this would be strange since they are four inches apart.
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What I suggest is looking at the factory wiring diagram for the 95, and finding out which pin on the ECU harness corresponds to the colored wired on the plug where the IAT is spliced into, to verify that you are spliced into the correct wires.
If you don't have them already; this will help you verify exactly what wire on the connector goes to and is used for. Miata Forumz - Mazda Miata Chat Forums |
Going through your posts, picking it apart.
What is Est air temp? I've never seen that on Tunerstudio. Did you right click it and set the gauges to IAT? Also, did you go to project properties/calibrate sensors/ and calibrate the IAT accordingly? |
holy continuity! The pigtail made by the previous ms owner was the turd. I had a fancy delphi plug with the wires just jammed into it. No female wire teminals, just balled up exposed wire. Moving on to the idle adjustment now, should I skip the open loop and go straight for closed?
Thanks guys |
Originally Posted by dieselmiata
(Post 1118398)
Going through your posts, picking it apart.
What is Est air temp? I've never seen that on Tunerstudio. Did you right click it and set the gauges to IAT? Also, did you go to project properties/calibrate sensors/ and calibrate the IAT accordingly? |
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I just checked again. I definitely only have the choice of "est. intake air temp".
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Originally Posted by dieselmiata
(Post 1118396)
What I suggest is looking at the factory wiring diagram for the 95, and finding out which pin on the ECU harness corresponds to the colored wired on the plug where the IAT is spliced into, to verify that you are spliced into the correct wires.
If you don't have them already; this will help you verify exactly what wire on the connector goes to and is used for. Miata Forumz - Mazda Miata Chat Forums |
Originally Posted by ryansmoneypit
(Post 1118403)
I just checked again. I definitely only have the choice of "est. intake air temp".
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Originally Posted by bahurd
(Post 1118405)
To help, the link that dieselmiata gave you, look at Pg 8-9 of the PDF file. On Pg 8 the left side is where your harness connects to the ECU (notice how you have 2 "blocks" of numbers 1A, 1B etc... 2A, 2B etc, this corresponds with your 2 connectors) so if you go from that point you can figure out what wire is where (and what colors to look for). Sometimes it helps to print both pages + tape them at the margin with the wires aligned so you can view the circuits. Sorry to be so basic if you know that.
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ok, Im getting an Est. air temp that I believe now. still idles like crap. If I use a spark and fuel table that makes sense to me, It idles at 1800K. if ii pull all of the timing out (down to 5degfor a block of cells) it comes down to 800 and sounds like poo poo. shakes really bad. If I remove all of the fuel, i get similar results. If i remove both of them, I end up with a map that looks like none I have ever seen around here. still in open loop, I am convinced that I need to figure this out before going to closed loop settings.
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Stubling on a good write up on idle setting, I decided that I needed to start all over with a new base map. noob question- Why does a non turbo base map from diy have map readings to 240kpa????? isnt this a turbo type pressure? if so, how do I re set it going only to say 105KPA, without individually changing every cell? if I use the cell generator, after entering all of the info it requires, I get a whole map of zeros.
In the idle tune instructions, It says to unplug the iac controll and raise the idle back up by turning the idle screw about 1full turn..Ummm, I had to go like 8 turns. something must be wrong here.. Should I still in open loop, have my pwm working at full temp, or should it zero out somewhere before full temp? Totally discouraged, another free weekend day spent fiddle fucking with a car that still runs like crap. UPDATE! reloded a base map again, started from the beginning and it idles! seems to run ok but the tune looks really strange.. new tune tomorrow. |
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