Originally Posted by Dem768
(Post 863443)
You really don't need crazy anything. I'm running 10 degrees ignition at idle with my idle valve in closed loop control. Once you get your PID settings correct (there is an excellent guide to this) you are all good. Just make sure your fuel is set properly.
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Originally Posted by 18psi
(Post 863401)
Tons and tons of cars gain a lot of torque, smoothness, and overall drive "better" with the megasquirt maps and proper tuning. There is nothing spectacular at all about the stock ecu fuel and spark maps.
THe Adap had a great feature, its "MBT finder", which nobody used... so it was taken out. |
I messed with it using your suggested technique of staying under 100kpa and all that, but you're right: I don't think any of us REALLY used it.
What makes you think the OEM mapping is tuned to MBT? |
It'll have to be pretty close, in order to improve MPG.
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Am I the only person who is entirely uninterested in what the stock ECU does? I tuned a fairly stock '94 last week and found nearly 20ft.lbs of torque at 3000rpm by switching from the stock ECU to an AEM EMS.
If the stock ECU is that far off the mark, then I prefer to just ignore it entirely and build my own maps. |
that's what I've been saying in basically every post
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And Sav is saying the factory WOT maps aren't good.
Has anyone shown that the factory part-throttle maps are similarly lame? |
Has anyone attempted to tune part throttle on the dyno?
I mean, what's the point of having a load holding dyno? If you are just doing WOT RPM sweeps then a Dynojet will be almost as good. |
I will be doing driveability tuning on the local dynojet once I deem my car ready.
part throttle and traistition tuning. and a dynojet can do it if it has a load cell |
Are you going to attempt finding MBT at part-throttle?
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ah forgot to post, but yeah that is the goal.
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Originally Posted by JasonC SBB
(Post 864370)
Has anyone shown that the factory part-throttle maps are similarly lame?
Originally Posted by JasonC SBB
(Post 864711)
Has anyone attempted to tune part throttle on the dyno?
I mean, what's the point of having a load holding dyno? If you are just doing WOT RPM sweeps then a Dynojet will be almost as good. |
Well mine is also running pretty advanced compared to stock, about 6 degrees advance on the whole map taking into account the fact that the car is pre-tuned for 91 RON, and we can only get 95 RON over here. But even though the drive is awesome, I'm worried that there could be detonation... Anyway to figure it out without buying some det cans?
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2 Attachment(s)
Originally Posted by JasonC SBB
(Post 863241)
The Y-axis doesn't appear to be simply the AFM output voltage.
It looks like this: AFM voltage -> lookup table to output airflow -> divided by RPM to get VE (this is the Y axis) A solution looking for a problem, I guess. It would be some use on a 1.6 where you could fit an RX7 AFM instead, but not much use on a 1.8. Anyway,the law of the lookup table looks like this: https://www.miataturbo.net/attachmen...ine=1337345639 (X-axis is input value, Y-axis is output) |
hmm need to compare with obd 2 data output on a newer car
X is voltage\adc Y is airflow Don't know off hand what airflow units those are because 640g\s is way to much for this maf and 64g\s is way too little |
It's only the shape of the chart that's meaningful; the actual numbers are arbitrary. It's not reading airflow in any particular units. It just takes a voltage reading from a 10 bit A-D input and uses that to interpolate a value from a 7 bit lookup table to produce a 16 bit output.
Whatever it does next with that value (divide it by rpm?) will rescale it again. |
ok, appericate the feedback.
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I reckon the AFR target table on the first page makes no sense at all. While on open loop the ECU won't cycle the fuel mixture according to the narrowband sensor, thus that table makes no sense for open loop. And on closed loop it always fluctuates between 14.5 and 15.3 (that, I tested myself) independent of load or speed. Of course, if you go near WOT, or into high revs, the ECU steps back to open loop, therefore that map does not have any meaning in practice. I reckon, if that map was stimmed, then it serves only as a very rough readout of AFRs on a mix of open loop and closed loop...
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it very well has meaning. it is the commanded AFR map the ecu uses for fuel calucations
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How so? It can either go one of two ways...
Either that map was read out of the original memory, and it only makes sense at a purely theoretical level (such as, the ECU calculating the fuel to match this AFR from the AFM data and the injector capacity), and it will not correspond with the actual value because there are always slight variations or this map was read from the ECU by stimming it and/or driving around and logging results, in which case it's a mix of open and closed loop driving. I know someone said some posts before this one, that the ECU can't read anything other than rich or lean from a narrowband (which is true) but it can use these values to modify the turnpoint of the lean/rich wave signal, which would work in theory, but like I said there is no change to the AFR targets in closed loop mode in practice. So, I have no idea what to make of that. Would be nice to be able to set up a Megasquirt to run just the same as the factory ECU, and tune from there, though! |
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