The first eight of these posts were made by several people regarding this subject. However they were located in Engine Conversions under the title of "Twin Spark head on 2L Nord Block".
Most/all factory ECU tuning is pretty conservative. As long as you are using an appropriate octane fuel, 0.5 extra compression wouldn't require any ignition map changes. There would be more requirements for ignition map changes if you played with the settings of the variable valve timing.Next question is would it be possible to predict - up to a point - how to compensate for relatively small modifications such as the additional .5 compression on a modified chip? Meaning stock cams, etc.? Or is the only way to really know is with the car on a chassis dyno?
It sounds like you are getting to the point where you need to have every thing set up on a bench. With some means to simulate engine speed (either some sort of frequency generator that replicates the behavior of the crank angle sensors output and signal shape) or a 60-2 tone wheel attached to a variable speed drive and Bosch sensor.Maybe the table value is added to another parameter to determine whether to activate vvt?
So the mid-range values might turn it on depending on another condition, and the 100% cells garantee it's on in those areas?
Peak torque isn't always developed just prior to detonation. At part throttle, where the effective/dynamic compression ratio is much less than the static compression ratio (regardless of cam timing), the engine will require more ignition advance to achieve best performance (Jim, I know that you know that). But it is quite possible to advance the ignition timing even further and have the engine start to loose torque/power without encountering detonation. So this whole theory that an engine management system is constantly trying to advance the ignition timing to the point of knock and then back it off is both misleading to the average Joe and is potentially giving the ECU manufacturer's a bad reputation and technically to much credit.Yes, but the base map depends on some basic engine constants like chamber shape and CR and this, is separated from any load signal like afm/map. Unless you have an active system always searching for the max advance value (brink of detonation) you must make allowance for CR in your base map. Visualize this: two identical load conditions, one with 8:1CR and one with 10:1CR. Wouldn't they warrant two different maps (remember, no knock sensor magic)?
Jim K.
Both cars are running on 98RON octane (Australia).InstiTS, were there any modifications to either TS, other than the Squadra chip? And did you lose anything, like low rpm torque, poor idle, or poor gas/petrol/benzina mileage?
I gather you feel the chip is worth getting?
While I would much prefer not to have to, I would be wiling to add an additive, providing I can find one that really works. Many years ago when I lived in Pasadena (about 12 miles away) a station sold 98 octane whose cost was about double the rate of the next highest octane (92). Assuming they still sell it, I don't believe I'd be willing to drive that far to fill up.
I believe the RON setting is a manual adjustment that would otherwise be handled by the CPS/knock sensor... so yes, small increments in advance would sound about right. Reference for those interested here: Craig's Place, Fuel Quality Plug (S30)97RON is pretty close to what you guys call 92 octane, you shouldn't need an octane booster to use the 97RON setting.
Your 98 would be around 102RON over here - I'm not surprised it cost twice as much!
Does the 97RON plug just add ~3 degrees of advance to the ignition?
@InstiTS - My interest comes from having recently converted an alfetta to EFI using mostly GM (holden) parts (see this thread), and having a bit of experience in embedded systems programming/design helps.
When the Motronic discussion started, I was surprised at how little knowledge of the inner workings there was in the community, so thought I'd poke around a bit.
I've been doing some 8051 dissasembly recently, so was familiar enough with the processor's instruction set to make some sense of it all.
I've never seen a TS motor or ECU, so I'm really flying blind here
If you weren't on the other side of the country, I'd be grabbing my test gear and paying you a visit!
Thanks for that link - a few pieces of the puzzle just fell into place after reading that!so yes, small increments in advance would sound about right. Reference for those interested here: Craig's Place, Fuel Quality Plug (S30)