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quickieafsetup [2008/01/23 06:42]
76.100.119.159
quickieafsetup [2024/03/15 11:16]
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-====== Overview ====== 
-I was asked to store this post away somewhere for future reference. ​ For now, I'll just dump it in here as is and maybe come back later and edit/expand upon it.  It's really just documentation of my personal process for running through a "​quickie"​ setup with a new car using DSMLink. ​ It's intended to help the user get a handle on whether fuel delivery and airflow metering all make sense. 
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-====== Process ====== 
-First, if you don't already know what fuel trims are or how they'​re used by the ECU, then I would strongly recommend you start by reading through [[FuelTrimUpdatePoints]]. ​ Knowledge of this fundamental concept is key to understanding everything else below. 
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-I generally monitor ''​STFT''​ and ''​AirflowPerRev''​ at idle. I want to see ''​STFT''​ cycling around 0% with ''​LTFTLo''​ around +/- 5% or so. You'd expect to see 0.28 g/rev for ''​AirflowPerRev''​ at idle ((Automatics and 2.3L engines will generally have a slightly higher AirflowPerRev value at idle.)), but I don't get too caught up on that if the fuel trims are inline with global fuel settings that make sense for my injectors. 
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-If fuel trims at idle are not where I want them, I either use the lower airflow sliders (50 and //maybe// 150hz sliders) or I use deadtime to tweak things. Which I use usually depends on whether ''​AirflowPerRev''​ is inline or not. If ''​AirflowPerRev''​ is off from 0.28 g/rev in the opposite direction from ''​LTFTLo'',​ then I adjust the lower airflow sliders more than deadtime. If ''​AirflowPerRev''​ is around 0.28 g/rev, I might focus on deadtime instead for idle fuel trim adjustments. Just keep an ear out for little misfires at idle that can sometimes be introduced with deadtime adjustments,​ particularly if the injectors are not well matched at low pulsewidth. 
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-Next I do some cruising around, again watching ''​STFTs''​ to see where they like to hang out. I don't really have a good airflow figure to watch for at cruise because it depends much more on throttle position and road inclination than idle airflow does. So it's hard to pick a value there. I just watch ''​STFTs''​ and try to adjust airflow sliders or fuel settings accordingly. I would consider airflow slider adjustments if I know I have reason to suspect airflow to be off a bit (maybe I'm dialing in a hacked MAF or something). I would focus on fuel settings more if ''​LTFT''​ were off for both idle and cruise. 
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-Then I do a few pulls and look at ''​BoostEst''​ around 5500-6000 RPM to make sure it matches with what the gauge was reading. Some deviation is expected, especially as revs increase. But more than a psi or two and I feel like I want to tweak the airflow sliders some more. 
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-At that point, I'm usually pretty happy with the setup and can start tuning. 
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-If you have a WBO2 wired into the ECU for datalogging,​ then you can do even more checks and verification. In that case, I set the estimated A/F Ratio properties to match my global fuel settings and see where the estimated A/F Ratio differs from the measured. 
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-In all cases, I constantly do cross checks. For example, if ''​LTFTLo''​ at idle is positive by a good bit (more than 5%) yet ''​AirflowPerRev''​ is also higher than 0.28 and my deadtime has already been increased a good bit from where I'd expect it, then I have to question what's going on because the numbers don't add up. Maybe fuel pressure at idle is higher than what I assumed it was, for example. 
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quickieafsetup.txt ยท Last modified: 2024/03/15 11:16 (external edit)