Addicted to meth wrote:Our iats seem way to hot for this setup.
I do not understand why you don't have iat1 in the same location as iat2 so the ECU sees real airs, and let iat2 be in the filter (that was retry smart idea).
Also why 70% ve offset?
You can user he injector pulse. Width multiplier to add fuel I. Boost and keep the offset stock. I have found if the fuel system is up to the task no offset or multiplier is needed.
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also, why the hell would both IATs in the same spot make any sense?
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maybe you could better explain to me how the Injector Pulsewidth multiplier works for boost when it references vaccuum? I'm not using a 2.5 bar fake, and I will not be switching to one as it causes other errors not tunable with the tables I can see via HPT
Addicted to meth wrote:As for the pulse width multiplier. It reads in KPA, left side starts at 95 and goes all the way down to 0. 0 would be the same as WOT on a N?A car meaning zero vacuum.
Most of the time we put this whole table at 1.000 which would can still do. but in the 0 table increase this to 1.400, or whatever you need to get the bulk of your fuel. You can even start at the 10, and 5 ramping it up some as boost would already be building at this time.
You will still use your VE tables for fine tuning.
I have used this table on a few M62 cars setup like yours and it works well. Your basically increasing the pulse width
Y3llowCav wrote:For whatever reason I'm unable to upload the video but I can tell you that when I went to the track (before meth injection) my IAT's were hovering around 150 the whole time; even at night when it was cool. Not running a dual pass endplate but everything else is the same cooling wise. I was running a 3.1 pulley too.
Philly D wrote:ZZP only makes the head to intake manifold spacer I believe
Tinkles(KGM) wrote:Brad, you lose boost because the air is compressed in the intake manifold, not the blower. The blower can only move a fixed amount of which whatever pulley you have on it and that fixed amount of air is going into a larger space than before so psi will drop. But CFM will not change.
-Z Yaaaa- wrote:Tinkles(KGM) wrote:Brad, you lose boost because the air is compressed in the intake manifold, not the blower. The blower can only move a fixed amount of which whatever pulley you have on it and that fixed amount of air is going into a larger space than before so psi will drop. But CFM will not change.
how can a 1/4" thick spacer cause that much of a larger space for the boost to fill? thats a big pressure drop for such a teeny spacer.
also, roots blowers do not "compress" the air, they just push more air into the engine than the it can take in on its own, naturally.
-Z Yaaaa- wrote:also, roots blowers do not "compress" the air, they just push more air into the engine than the it can take in on its own, naturally.