Sparky8370
June 14th, 2009, 12:26 PM
I've been logging some data, then I click on the tune to see the affected cells in different tables. I noticed that no matter what the commanded or actual fuel pressure was, that it only would highlight in the 190 MPa column of any table that has fuel pressure. IE: B0720, B0721, B0722.
Because I was logging to find the cells in a specific portion to lower my EGT's, it wasn't very broad. I would go into B1001 (fuel pressure base) and the highlighted cells were usually between 150 and 160. I was wondering why it was in the 190 column and checked the tables that modify fuel pressure base (B1002, B1004, and B1006) and I could find no logical explanation for this.
So I took a longer log and highlighted the whole log and checked the previously mentioned tables (B0720, B0721, B0722) and still it was only highlighted in the 190 column. This time I had many more highlights in B1001, all below 190. So I went back to my log and started looking at some things.
Here's an example of what I found:
On frame 20 actual fuel pressure 12,724 psi (which comes out to 87.7 MPa)
Pulse width 509.
The 190 column is highlighted with a pulse width of 440. But if I go to the 80 and 90MPa columns in the same mm3 row, the numbers are much closer to what was recorded in the log at that frame.
My conclusion is that the ECM is using the data from the right columns, but the scan tool is only highlighting the 190MPa column in the tune tool. Which makes it difficult to use that function of EFI Live.
Also, I have a couple requests.
1) EFI sets a maximum of 250MPa, but all the tables with fuel pressure only go up to 190MPa, can these tables be expanded to go beyond 190? Maybe to 250, since that is the maximum?
2) My logged fuel pressure is in PSI, but it's in MPa in the tables. Can there be a PID to log that displays fuel pressure in MPa, maybe with several decimal points? PSI is much finer of a measurement, which would be better in the tables IMO, but I am assuming you didn't want the cells to be too wide. I would like having PSI in the tables in the tune table much better.
This is with 7.5.5 build 88
I'll attach a log file and a copy of the tune so you can see what I mean.
Because I was logging to find the cells in a specific portion to lower my EGT's, it wasn't very broad. I would go into B1001 (fuel pressure base) and the highlighted cells were usually between 150 and 160. I was wondering why it was in the 190 column and checked the tables that modify fuel pressure base (B1002, B1004, and B1006) and I could find no logical explanation for this.
So I took a longer log and highlighted the whole log and checked the previously mentioned tables (B0720, B0721, B0722) and still it was only highlighted in the 190 column. This time I had many more highlights in B1001, all below 190. So I went back to my log and started looking at some things.
Here's an example of what I found:
On frame 20 actual fuel pressure 12,724 psi (which comes out to 87.7 MPa)
Pulse width 509.
The 190 column is highlighted with a pulse width of 440. But if I go to the 80 and 90MPa columns in the same mm3 row, the numbers are much closer to what was recorded in the log at that frame.
My conclusion is that the ECM is using the data from the right columns, but the scan tool is only highlighting the 190MPa column in the tune tool. Which makes it difficult to use that function of EFI Live.
Also, I have a couple requests.
1) EFI sets a maximum of 250MPa, but all the tables with fuel pressure only go up to 190MPa, can these tables be expanded to go beyond 190? Maybe to 250, since that is the maximum?
2) My logged fuel pressure is in PSI, but it's in MPa in the tables. Can there be a PID to log that displays fuel pressure in MPa, maybe with several decimal points? PSI is much finer of a measurement, which would be better in the tables IMO, but I am assuming you didn't want the cells to be too wide. I would like having PSI in the tables in the tune table much better.
This is with 7.5.5 build 88
I'll attach a log file and a copy of the tune so you can see what I mean.