#### ## ## ###### ## #####
##### ## ## ## ## ## # ####
## ## #### ## #### ## ##
_______ ( ____ ) | ( )| | (____)| | _____) | ( | ) |/
### ## ## ## ## ## ####
IMPORTANT: enter the case-INsensitive alphabetic (no numbers) code AND WRITE SOME SHORT summary of changes (below) if you are saving changes. (not required for previewing changes). Wiki-spamming is not tolerated, will be removed, so it does NOT even show up in history. Spammers go away now. Visit Preferences to set your user name Summary of change: == Field Report == Calibrating Unit No.638 Toyota 4A-GETT, 36-1 crank trigger, wasted spark coil pack. LowZ injectors (6R8 resistors) Transient suppression diode. System was being configured by a professional calibration engineer. His verdict was that the ECU was fit for purpose, but needed a few additions to bring it up to a more professional standard. His observations are detailed below. (And added to from an email sent 30/10/2006 '''Air temp fuel enrichment & ignition retard.''' As MAT increase over 70degC, scalable spark and fuel enrichment is required to help decrease the knock window. Spark needs to be retarded as IAT increases, a simple scaling table would be sufficient. ''why 70degC? This temperature is engine dependent. This summer I tune tight n/a engine which had real knock problems above 30degC MAT. At 16degC it works without problems.'' MembersPage/GintsK Increasing IAT directly effects the likelihood of knock, when IAT increased the advance needs to be reduced in order to decrease the likelihood of knock. If you assume that the normal operating air temp is 30-50 degC then you'd want to run with a constant enrichment value 30-45, 45-60deg you'd take fuel out because of the drop in air density. 60 up you want to start adding more fuel. This is what the default airden-tables do (which can be changed, of course, it's the hex-files). ''airden tables come from ideal gas law. In real life other factors such as fuel evaporation has influence. We definitely needs configurable MAT enrichment such as in image below. Few years ago I was spectator in local winter rally. On second km of first SS stalls few cars with melted engine internals. There was -27C.'' MembersPage/GintsK However, custom configurable MAT-enrichment is planned: This was good MAT-enrich for kalske, in a 5 cyl 20VT audi: http://www.audiclub.fi/kalske/vems/mat_cor.PNG This also applies to coolant temp. Which is weird (everyone use monotonously decreasing enrichment that goes down to 100% at 71..75C)... but CLT-enrichment (aka warmup enrichment) is configurable in 10 points. '''Knock Sensor''' Knock sensor values need better explanation. MembersPage/PhatBob will need to work on this, by reading the TPIC8101 datasheet and wording the information in a more user friendly manner. '''Accel enrichment''' Getting the throttle opening speed values is difficult as even the slightest touch on the pedal maxed out the dv/dt value. Suggested method: RPM Vs pulse width adder Vs decay time look-up table - output is pulse width adder and a decay time at that rpm (as trans fuel requirements are as dependent on rpm as pedal movement) Dv/dtps Vs scalar look-up table. Output is scalar based on rate of change of pedal. Transient fuel is the output of the first table * the second. This approach works very well. '''Boost Controller''' Boost control needs more user information, such as '''display internal variables, most importantly solenoid duty and integral railing'''. The air restrictor is needed because the valve simply cannot do it's job without it. Even with fully open valve, the full boost pressure would get to the actuator: the valve (even if fully opened!) could not reduce the actuator pressure without the restrictor (=> so control would be impossible). It's '''impossible to regulate the actuator pressure if there is no restriction that is a good match to the valve opening''' (thin tubes might also be sufficient with a rather big valve). See what happens as we go from a highly oversized feed (compared to the solenoid controlled valve's maximum opening) to the right size: * you can be '''100.0000% sure that with a thick air-pressure-supply and a tiny valve you have ABSOLUTELY NO control, even the valve fully opened has no effect on the pressure that gets to the actuator''' * with a not-so-thick air-pressure supply the valve has some effect, just not enough to reach target boost * with an even thinner supply the valve has some effect, even reach target boost, just not enough to reach target fast (that's one method to raise/lower boost without electronics, but it's not as fast as a well configured electronic control) * with the right size proper regulation is possible, and it can be reached fast (when properly configured) This assumes the connection using a t-peice to bleed the valve, the setup was connected thus: http://vems.hu/www.vems.co.uk/VEMSInstalls/MattJ4AGZE/BoostValveMattJ.png The config, tables, msq and final datalogs are all here: http://www.vems.hu/wiki/index.php?page=MembersPage%2FPhatBob%2FInstallations%2FMattJ While the Boost controller was configured successfully the Engineer felt that it was only possible because he'd calibrated boost systems before with the feedback. Please note that the controller '''WAS''' Calibrated correctly as it repeatedly held 200kpa (100kp boost) for prolonged periods. '''Fuel Trim''' Being able to trim injectors to take account of different cylinder charge would be useful (seeing around 20-25C difference between the two turbine inlets on Matts car, could be equaled by richening the appropriate two cylinders) Optional: Add document to category: Wiki formatting: * is Bullet list ** Bullet list subentry ... '''Bold''', ---- is horizontal ruler, <code> preformatted text... </code> See wiki editing HELP for tables and other formatting tips and tricks.