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idleair [2009/12/17 14:41]
twdorris
idleair [2011/07/28 16:01]
dmertz
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 The problem here is that the MAF sensor is being disrupted in some way under these conditions and the ECU is injecting far more fuel than it should. ​ The ECU "​sees"​ more airflow and believes the engine needs more fuel as a result. ​ But the engine does not need more fuel...it needs less.  The ECU just has no way to know that.  This excess fuel can basically flood the engine and cause it to bog (as seen in this example) or even die entirely. The problem here is that the MAF sensor is being disrupted in some way under these conditions and the ECU is injecting far more fuel than it should. ​ The ECU "​sees"​ more airflow and believes the engine needs more fuel as a result. ​ But the engine does not need more fuel...it needs less.  The ECU just has no way to know that.  This excess fuel can basically flood the engine and cause it to bog (as seen in this example) or even die entirely.
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 What you basically do is to tell the ECU to clamp airflow under these conditions to some value that you know is more reasonable. ​ If the throttle is closed (idle switch is active), you can assume airflow demand is minimal and you can clamp any abnormally high airflow reading accordingly. What you basically do is to tell the ECU to clamp airflow under these conditions to some value that you know is more reasonable. ​ If the throttle is closed (idle switch is active), you can assume airflow demand is minimal and you can clamp any abnormally high airflow reading accordingly.
  
-The image at the right illustrates a "​typical"​ Idle Air Clamp configuration. ​ You can start with this as a base, but feel free to adjust the values if you find that the stalling gets worse or doesn'​t seem to be improving much.+The image at the right illustrates a "​typical"​ Idle Air Clamp configuration. ​ You can start with this as a base, but feel free to adjust the values if you find that the stalling gets worse or doesn'​t seem to be improving much.  Values that are too high won't allow the clamp to activate and provide benefit; values that are to low will over-clamp, reducing the airflow reading below actual and causing lean running when the clamp is active.
  
 The values in this table are "​AvgAirVolPerRevY"​ values. ​ These are just raw values you can display in your logs by going into the Display values dialog (F9) and clicking the "Raw values"​ button. ​ Then select AvgAirVolPerRevY and hit OK. The values in this table are "​AvgAirVolPerRevY"​ values. ​ These are just raw values you can display in your logs by going into the Display values dialog (F9) and clicking the "Raw values"​ button. ​ Then select AvgAirVolPerRevY and hit OK.
idleair.txt ยท Last modified: 2024/03/15 11:16 (external edit)