Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

S52 OBDI chips - including large MAF + injector tunes

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    It takes a good while. Usually comparisons are done with ~6 dyno pulls. Not nearly enough. A half hour on the street should be plenty.

    Originally posted by BimmerToad View Post
    Besides, there is more power to be had in the ignition tables of the chip than the fuel tables.
    I agree with that, but the AFR is critical also.

    Originally posted by BimmerToad View Post
    Sure the AFR might not be ideal, but it almost never is.
    Actually, it almost always is, in a properly functioning system. I've attached a screenshot of a datalog on the TRM stage 1 turbo prototype. Running a TRM chip and 30lb injectors with a stock MAF on a 413.
    Attached Files
    Last edited by matt; 11-13-2007, 06:46 PM.

    Comment


      #17
      Fuel trims have next to nothing to do with the power you'll make at WOT. I'll be happy to dig up my motronic training manuals tomorrow and post excerpts if you'd like. Under WOT DME will default to tables for timing and fuel based off of load/airflow, lots of fuel injection systems calculate load based off airflow.

      In other words if you're looking at straight horsepower numbers on a dyno swapping chips will give you a better comparison than you're claiming. I'll be the first to grant you that things like idle and part throttle drivability will be effected, but saying that power numbers will be is misleading.
      sigpicFormer professional wrench thrower.
      Current:
      1988 325is S52
      Former:
      2008 Sparkling Graphite M3 Sedan(victim of home ownership)
      1988 M5
      1996 328is

      Comment


        #18
        Originally posted by WillisE30 View Post
        Fuel trims have next to nothing to do with the power you'll make at WOT. I'll be happy to dig up my motronic training manuals tomorrow and post excerpts if you'd like.
        Power numbers are affected by AFR. AFR (even at WOT) is affected by adaptations inside the ECU.

        Originally posted by WillisE30 View Post
        Under WOT DME will default to tables for timing and fuel based off of load/airflow, lots of fuel injection systems calculate load based off airflow.
        The DME does not "default" to anything. At idle, part throttle, and wide open throttle, it is reading the fuel tables we tell it to read, calculating required fuel based on mass air flow, then applying a correction factor that it calculates itself at part throttle.
        Originally posted by WillisE30 View Post
        but saying that power numbers will be is misleading.
        I don't appreciate that. Hundreds of hours figuring out the ECU's programming, thousands of dollars spent on dyno tuning, and hundreds of thousands of miles of road testing disagree with your assertion also.

        Comment


          #19
          Power numbers will vary with AFR. A simple swap of a chip (and thus zeroed fuel trims) on the dyno will screw with the results. The ecu uses relative target values. i.e. WOT is a set amount richer than part throttle, as specified by the difference in the values between the WOT tables and the PT tables. More importantly, an incorrect WOT AFR could be lean, and lean with well tuned *agressive* spark tables would cause knock. That knock would be detected by the knock sensors, and the ECU would then pull timing. No more knock, but no more power either. "If it were richer and didn't knock, it would have had another 15 degrees of timing in it, and made X more hp" is not an easy thing to account for on the dyno.

          These motors *can* run relatively lean at WOT and make reasonable power... IF the timing is still conservative. The factory software likes to sit in the 14's... right around stoich... until 4500 rpm or so, then starts to taper rich from there. My *race* chips start at 12.8 and stay at 12.8, about 2 full AFR points richer from 1k to 4500, and 1 full AFR point richer from 4500 to 6k, than stock. You have a lot more flexibility with the timing in cases like that.

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by matt View Post
            Power numbers are affected by AFR. AFR (even at WOT) is affected by adaptations inside the ECU.
            No one is disputing that with you. However, the DME is running off those tables you mentioned (timing and fuel delivery) and the MAF at WOT to determine how much fuel to deliver.

            WOT falls under open loop opperation, in other words(I know you know but others reading this might not) the DME is NOT considering the O2 senors, ECT, fuel trims or any of the other emmissions related stuff. Fuel trims don't apply when the vehicle is in open loop.
            sigpicFormer professional wrench thrower.
            Current:
            1988 325is S52
            Former:
            2008 Sparkling Graphite M3 Sedan(victim of home ownership)
            1988 M5
            1996 328is

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by WillisE30 View Post
              No one is disputing that with you. However, the DME is running off those tables you mentioned (timing and fuel delivery) and the MAF at WOT to determine how much fuel to deliver.

              WOT falls under open loop opperation, in other words(I know you know but others reading this might not) the DME is NOT considering the O2 senors, ECT, fuel trims or any of the other emmissions related stuff. Fuel trims don't apply when the vehicle is in open loop.
              False! Fuel trims ALWAYS apply. The motor is not READING the O2 sensors, but it is using information gathered from the O2 sensors at other times and integrated into the adaptation/trim value.

              Originally posted by matt View Post
              Now, why it calculates the trims at part throttle. The AFR target everywhere between idle and 90% throttle is stoich. A narrowband O2 sensor reads very accurately only right at stoich. Basically, the ECU looks for stoich at part throttle, if it sees rich there, it decides that something is making the MAF read high or some other issue is going on... it removes fuel globally. Any issue that richens the mix at part throttle will apply at full throttle also. And the same thing applies to a lean mixture, but usually the cause of this is an intake leak. Same result, more fuel is added to idle/PT/WOT via a correction factor.

              Comment


                #22
                Originally posted by WillisE30 View Post
                No one is disputing that with you. However, the DME is running off those tables you mentioned (timing and fuel delivery) and the MAF at WOT to determine how much fuel to deliver.

                WOT falls under open loop opperation, in other words(I know you know but others reading this might not) the DME is NOT considering the O2 senors, ECT, fuel trims or any of the other emmissions related stuff. Fuel trims don't apply when the vehicle is in open loop.
                What point would a fuel trim have if it weren't global?

                The DME doesn't use O2 feedback in open loop mode (such as is the condition under WOT), but it does use the fuel trims.

                The ECU's part throttle tables are populated with what are basically "target AFR values". The WOT tables are likewise populated. The difference between the values in the PT table and the WOT table is the difference in AFR that is to be seen between PT and WOT.
                The part throttle tables are generally populated with values that should hit stoich. When that mark is missed, the O2 sensor detects this and the ECU applies a trim value to compensate. Eventually the trim value is *right* and the target value is hit... that trim value is then applied to all tables, including WOT.

                If the fuel values were off by a full point, such as a full point lean, at cruise, then they would also probably be about a full point leaner than intended at WOT. if we corrected the PT tables and not the WOT tables, WOT would still be a full point off. That is why fuel trims are global.

                Comment


                  #23
                  That makes sense. Thank you for correcting my misperception.
                  sigpicFormer professional wrench thrower.
                  Current:
                  1988 325is S52
                  Former:
                  2008 Sparkling Graphite M3 Sedan(victim of home ownership)
                  1988 M5
                  1996 328is

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Wow, what a discussion, very informative.

                    Hey Matt, you don't by chance have the OBDI DME data stream definitions for AIM MXL, do you? I would love to free up some analog sensor inputs :)

                    Comment


                      #25
                      No, we use analog datalogging also. The data the the OBDI DME can stream isn't in a format the MXL recognizes anyway.

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Sooooo... who wants a chip for Christmas? :mrgreen:

                        Comment


                          #27
                          matt > all

                          Comment

                          Working...
                          X