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496Stingray
May 17th, 2015, 01:42 PM
Wanting to know if anyone has calibrated a lean cruise on an E78. L96 6.0
If so any pointers are appreciated.

GMPX
May 17th, 2015, 02:26 PM
Just keep in mind, the lean cruise concept was removed from GM's code late in the LS1 days, it was never in E38, E40 etc and certainly isn't in E78. To make it happen you would need to do some trickery to the tables.

496Stingray
May 17th, 2015, 03:07 PM
I thought that was/would be the case. Curious if anyone has tried it and or if we have access to the necessary tables to make it work?

GMPX
May 17th, 2015, 07:41 PM
I don't know if such tables would exist, I think you would only be skewing the ECM's intentions.

496Stingray
May 18th, 2015, 03:41 AM
Yeah my thoughts were to lean out the low load portions but as you said with the way the new ECMs work I'm not certain if I can fool it into doing what I want. Silly to me that they got rid of it, as lean cruise works well and saves a ton of fuel. I have a turbocharged stroker 6 cylinder in my Grand Cherokee that cruises in the 16.8 range on flat ground and averages 24 hwy on road trips. It's such a primitive system aka JTEC jeep that it doesn't have knock sensors or MAF. I'm running 3 bar MAP, closed loop with a turbo and gnarly solid lifter cam in it.

GMPX
May 18th, 2015, 08:37 AM
Emissions during lean cruise was the problem, GM had to put a check in the LS1 code to make sure only Holden vehicles (nothing in the US) could run in lean cruise. I guess by the time the E40 ECM arrived they just ditched it totally to work on AFM instead.

496Stingray
May 18th, 2015, 10:50 AM
Yah N0x BS... and having enough fuel in the mix to light up the cats etc..
What kills me is the logic that using 40-50% more fuel is better for the environment than slightly elevated NOx. Isn't burning less I'm general already better for the planet?? :-/

496Stingray
May 19th, 2015, 02:55 PM
Just checking my logic. Even if I were to "fool" the ECM somehow we can't do it in the VE tables. Is there not a table anyplace in this ECM that specifies commanded fuel in closed loop? We have PE commanded and cat protection enrichment etc.

Logged it today and it's steady in the 14.3-15.1 range considering that's on 15% corn gas it's not terrible.

ScarabEpic22
May 20th, 2015, 05:17 AM
Should be a Stoich AFR table for ethanol % in there, but it's a single row (or column, been a while since Ive looked). I.e. you cant adjust stoich at 2000rpm at 65kPa, just at 10% ethanol set to 14.1, 20% set to 13.6, etc.

496Stingray
May 20th, 2015, 07:08 AM
Should be a Stoich AFR table for ethanol % in there, but it's a single row (or column, been a while since Ive looked). I.e. you cant adjust stoich at 2000rpm at 65kPa, just at 10% ethanol set to 14.1, 20% set to 13.6, etc.

Correct it is there but as you said it will just skew the entire closed loop section lean. Gone are the days of commanding a lighter fuel mix under x/kpa and x/rpm. Unless there are tables we dont yet have access to then I am about out of ideas.

joecar
May 20th, 2015, 04:40 PM
LC does not save that much fuel (you're already not using much fuel at light load)... but even at light load, running lean will elevate combustion chamber temperature (which is not good for many reasons; remember, EPA/CARB likes the engine to run hot, but they don't like it from being lean).

( NOx might not seem like much, but if you've ever seen pictures of Los Angeles buried in brown fog in the late 1960's (I've also seen Sydney like this in the 1970's) then you know that NOx reacts with sunlight to make brown fog. )

( either way, LC is not really necessary, you're not saving much, and your engine does not really like LC )

496Stingray
May 21st, 2015, 03:26 AM
Joecar, thanks for the educated reply.
I agree with you. After logging the AFR in Logworks-3 for 3 days (200 miles) my cruise mix is running 14.7-15 as it is which is lean enough. With careful tuning of my cam angles and and spark tuning (about a 1000 miles and 30 files worth of changes during that time with careful logging, plotting the data out etc) I have managed to bring the truck up from 13.5 to 19-20 mpg (all freeway) as long as I remain under 75Mph. In Texas we have speed limits set at 75-80 on the most of the freeways surrounding my area so my hopes were to achieve 17-19 @ 80Mph. Not going to happen pushing a 7,000 3/4 Extended cab, long bed into the wind at those speeds. It will hold 15.5-16 though and not downshift at the slightest grade anymore which is nice. I have severe Ashthma and pollution is the reason, (lower level Ozone etc.) so even with my Hot Rods I have kept cats in place on all of them. The dyno tests dont lie and if the cats are properly sized for the engine they dont cost much if any notable power loss on a daily driver. Also worth noting is the load on the engine pushing this monster at 80-85Mph wouldnt allow me to lean out the mixture safely anyhow.

I can say that tuning the higher end of the engine has resulted in some impressive gains. The L96 likes more cam retard at the higher end then GM put into the stock tables. It also enjoys quite a bit more spark. I plotted the MAF g/sec and have increased that number by 54 g/sec over stock from 4400-6000 RPM. Havent put it on a dyno yet but more air = more power. Being and HD GM was understandibly conservative with the tune to keep it in one piece.

Thanks for the thoughtful reply and education, the support from the EFI team is awesome!

- Rob
rob@mangierisrodandcustom.com

joecar
May 21st, 2015, 04:05 AM
Hi Rob,


... With careful tuning of my cam angles and and spark tuning...
This is the key to economy and performance ^



... I have managed to bring the truck up from 13.5 to 19-20 mpg (all freeway) as long as I remain under 75Mph. In Texas we have speed limits set at 75-80 on the most of the freeways surrounding my area so my hopes were to achieve 17-19 @ 80Mph. Not going to happen pushing a 7,000 3/4 Extended cab, long bed into the wind at those speeds. It will hold 15.5-16 though and not downshift at the slightest grade anymore which is nice....
That is a very nice increase in mpg, good job ^ :cheers:
Yes, unfortunately as speed increases (above 50-60 mph) vehicle aerodynamics becomes significant (especially trucks).
This is the other key ^ (tuning the transmission to work intelligently with the engine (especially when engine has much torque), good deal :cheers:


...I have severe Ashthma and pollution is the reason, (lower level Ozone etc.) so even with my Hot Rods I have kept cats in place on all of them. The dyno tests dont lie and if the cats are properly sized for the engine they dont cost much if any notable power loss on a daily driver. Also worth noting is the load on the engine pushing this monster at 80-85Mph wouldnt allow me to lean out the mixture safely anyhow...
Yes, we must make sure to maintain our health ^ (so we can continue playing with cars :cheers: ) Yes, true, a modern cat of the right size will not impede flow (same as the MAF).



I can say that tuning the higher end of the engine has resulted in some impressive gains. The L96 likes more cam retard at the higher end then GM put into the stock tables. It also enjoys quite a bit more spark. I plotted the MAF g/sec and have increased that number by 54 g/sec over stock from 4400-6000 RPM. Havent put it on a dyno yet but more air = more power. Being and HD GM was understandibly conservative with the tune to keep it in one piece.

Thanks for the thoughtful reply and education, the support from the EFI team is awesome!
Yes, for many reasons, GM leave leave a lot on the table (not just to protect the drivetrain, but to make HP match the pricing levels... e.g. $Corvette > $Cadillac > $Firebird/Camaro > $Monte Carlo, and I'm sure various truck models fit in there also), and sometimes because the calibration engineer only went up to 4000 rpm... :)

Yes, I like people to learn how thing really work (and how to apply technology simply and effectively; I'm an engineer), thanks for the kind words.

496Stingray
May 21st, 2015, 08:07 AM
This is the other key ^ [/COLOR](tuning the transmission to work intelligently with the engine (especially when engine has much torque), good deal :cheers:

Very true I neglected to mention the major tuning changes I made to the T-43 6L90 shift schedules. Shifts were extremely late in stock trim. Say you applied enough throttle to hit 2200 RPM accelerating the trans would shift closer to 2700 allowing about 500 RPM without power before the shift would command. Created a really annoying driving experience that would make you "lift to shift" or just plant your foot into it out of aggrivation. Granted this was less prevalent when the truck has 2000-3000 lbs in the bed or towing a small car/hauler etc. My logic is Ill switch schedules to the Tow-Haul mode and leave the normal mode setup for running empty, normal street, day to day or spirited shifts when I want them.



Yes, I like people to learn how thing really work (and how to apply technology simply and effectively; I'm an engineer), thanks for the kind words.
I am an EE but manage network/security sales engineers by day and the car business is my side business/passion. Since I am learning this E78 and the torque based ECM in general I felt it wise to make incremental and documented changes and allow time to properly observe the outcomes. I began with the trans changes before ever touching the engine portion. Then began the engine incrementally, and as needed made some very minute adjustments to the shift schedule to match the power curve. I now have seamless acceleration with quicker and more firm shifts, the torque curve is improved down low substaintially as I focused heavily in the 1500-2500 range where most daily driving actually occurs.
Thanks again I really do appreciate the assistance/feedback.

GMPX
May 21st, 2015, 11:01 AM
Funny thing, GMH went to great lengths to get better highway economy on the late model GenIV's, AFM, turning off charging to conserve alternator load on the engine (which sometimes results in a flat battery, but that is another story), so why then do the climate control engineers insist on leaving the A/C clutch engaged the whole time even when it is not cooling? Seems like one of those George W moments (left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing).

496Stingray
May 21st, 2015, 12:12 PM
Agreed on that part. My C6 vette runs ac by default for everything then the truck decides to not allow engagement of the AC when the ambient outside temp is below 40F. So I get useless defrost in winters. Some move the sensor behind the radiator to trick it, I rigged a voltage regulator circuit to it to fool the ECM/BCM when needed with the push of a button hidden in the glovebox. Stupid design. Below freezing...ok debatable sense most moisture should be frozen out of the atmosphere but add in wet clothing,shoes, mats and the heater on and you want mixed mode dried warm air.

joecar
May 21st, 2015, 10:50 PM
...

I am an EE but manage network/security sales engineers by day and the car business is my side business/passion.

...I'm an EE; during my career I have slowly shifted from hardware to firmware to embedded software, and now I do linux kernel/driver programming (more specifically, device driver for Fibre Channel cards).

Yes, car stuff is my hobby (since I was 5) :)

joecar
May 21st, 2015, 10:53 PM
... so why then do the climate control engineers insist on leaving the A/C clutch engaged the whole time even when it is not cooling? Seems like one of those George W moments (left hand not knowing what the right hand is doing).Yes, this is very irritating... the vehicle exists solely for the purpose of the AC being able to run continuously... :doh2: