Darkstars wrote:find someone with HPTuners, pay them $100 for 2 credits, unlock your car and set the power enrichment to 0 rpm, problem solved
Airtonics wrote:Darkstars wrote:find someone with HPTuners, pay them $100 for 2 credits, unlock your car and set the power enrichment to 0 rpm, problem solved
Set it back but certainly not to 0 You want the computer controlling/altering the fuel during normal driving conditions.
I'd set it to 3100 or 3200 depending upon how fast you typically drive on the highway. If you always cruise at 80 or less 3100 should be fine...
JimmyZ wrote:It depends on the car... in your case, Phil, probably not. In the case of newer cars, like 2004+, probably so.
The EPA is constantly breathing down the neck of manufacturers to reign in emissions under a laundry list of conditions. Idling, accelerating under load, accelerating with light load, decelerating, revving in neutral....etc....you name it, they've got a requirement for it.
Add to that the fact that more and more states have added "treadmills" to their emissions testing and you've got a complicated situation. Now you've got a mandate that says the computer has to keep an increasingly tight leash on emissions while the car is moving at various speeds under wildly varying load conditions. Responding to this, GM revised the coding in the ECM to make the VSS part of the emissions sensor block, with all the associated pass/fail results. If you remove/cut/disable any emissions related sensor you throw the computer into "limp" mode...open loop, lower fuel ratios, retarded timing, etc. Gone are the days when WOT meant fuel dumps and 11.5:1 A/F rations. Now in closed loop, even at WOT under full load, the ECM sits there and regulates it like Scrooge counting pennies.
Cutting the VSS is a simple way to force the computer into open loop without sacrificing the input of other sensors. Remaiing sensors are still read, unlike some older ECMs that went into COMPLETELY open loop operation.
So, to answer the question...YES, on newer vehicles utilizing GM's new code removing the VSS will allow the computer into open loop mode. 2004+ is a near definite that you've got this code. 2003 is iffy. 2002 and older, negative.
On a side note, just for my own curiosity....can't we all just get along? I seem to recall everyone is here for the same reason, but lately it's been all about "oh, I found out first" or "oh I'm MORE stock" or "so-and-so is keeping secrets". Give me a @!#$ break people. Grow up, tune your engines, and have fun while you're doing it. Check your attitudes at the door, and don't assume anything. ANYONE can teach you something new at any given time...especially when you don't expect it, so keep your eyes and ears open.
Shifted wrote:Airtonics wrote:Darkstars wrote:find someone with HPTuners, pay them $100 for 2 credits, unlock your car and set the power enrichment to 0 rpm, problem solved
Set it back but certainly not to 0 You want the computer controlling/altering the fuel during normal driving conditions.
I'd set it to 3100 or 3200 depending upon how fast you typically drive on the highway. If you always cruise at 80 or less 3100 should be fine...
you can set it to 0, there are other things that make it go into PE like the TPS position. Setting the RPM to 0 makes the engine go into PE as soon as the TPS setting is satisified, so as long as you have that up high enough, the engine won't be in PE unless you step on it.