Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast
Results 11 to 20 of 22

Thread: injector flow rate table

  1. #11
    Lifetime Member Rich Z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    291

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joecar View Post
    But, if the pressure regulator were MAP referenced, the regulator would increase fuel pressure as MAP increased, causing the pressure
    difference across an injector to always be constant regardless of MAP variation, and in this case the IFR table would be flat with no slope;
    i.e. diff = FP + BARO - MAP, where FP = constant + MAP, so diff = constant + BARO
    :?
    Quote Originally Posted by dfe1 View Post
    The IFR table is simply the electronic equivalent of a vacuum line running between the intake manifold and the pressure regulator. Trucks have a vacuum referenced pressure regulator so the IFR table is a straight line.
    Sorry about bringing this old thread back to life, but I'm a RAW newbie at this tuning stuff and am sticking my toes into the water (timidly, I might add) by looking over the tune that was done on my car and then comparing the tables against a stock tune.

    Now if I understand the above quotes, then a car using a fuel pressure regulator that is MAP referenced (which mine is), then the IFR table should be a flat horizontal line. Is that correct? Well, I'm looking at the IFR table in my tune, and I see this:



    So obviously I am confused. The car seems to run fine except for some low RPM issues, but I would think that a MAP referenced fuel pressure regulator combined with changes in the injector pulse width forced by such an IFR table would give me some substantial issues.

    What am I missing here?

    CorvetteFlorida.com

    2002 Corvette Z06
    427 RHS block built by LME
    STS rear mounted twin turbos
    It nearly died on the operating table, but I'm bringing her back.

  2. #12
    Joe (Moderator) joecar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Posts
    28,403

    Default

    Hi Rich,

    The stock FPR on the Corvette has a hose on it, but the other end of the hose sees BARO not MAP...

    ( the hose disappears under the plastic coil cover, but it is not connected to the intake manifold )

    so it is un-referenced...

    so your IFR table is correct in being sloped.

  3. #13
    Lifetime Member Rich Z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    291

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by joecar View Post
    Hi Rich,

    The stock FPR on the Corvette has a hose on it, but the other end of the hose sees BARO not MAP...

    ( the hose disappears under the plastic coil cover, but it is not connected to the intake manifold )

    so it is un-referenced...

    so your IFR table is correct in being sloped.
    Sorry, I was not clear about this. Been in the trees for so long that I forget that I am in a forest.

    My car is anything but stock. Custom 427 based on an RHS block done by LME, STS rear mounted twin turbos, dual in tank fuel pumps by Lonnie's Performance, etc., etc. I put in a vacuum manifold block myself which is fed from the brake booster and connects to the secondary fuel pump enable switch, blow off valve, and runs to the Aeromotive fuel pressure regulator mounted right next to it behind the driver's side front wheel. I have a fuel pressure gauge and can watch the fuel pressure change during driving, so I am pretty sure it is working.



    The tuner is pretty highly respected and did an excellent job of getting my car running when the local guy who tried for about a year pretty much claimed that my car was untunable. So is it possible that he is using both the mapped FPR and the IFR table somehow? I know I told him about the FPR, and the car certainly runs fine enough as far as I can tell. Just some issues I have to tackle with the low RPM running and idle, that I know he didn't mess with much at all.

    So what the heck am I looking at here? I'n trying to contact the tuner, but so far haven't gotten any responses to my earlier emails. But heck, this time of year no one seems to take work seriously.

    I've decided I want to get into this tuning stuff, since I've been forced to do my own wrenching anyway (basically an ongoing nightmare for most of the past 3 years), and I might as well try to tackle this aspect of it as well. I'm retired and got some time on my hands.

    But seriously, this stuff is a really big gulp to try to take. I have a background in computer programming and been tinkering with cars since I was a teenager, but this is a whole new world behind this door I cracked open.

    CorvetteFlorida.com

    2002 Corvette Z06
    427 RHS block built by LME
    STS rear mounted twin turbos
    It nearly died on the operating table, but I'm bringing her back.

  4. #14
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    178

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rich Z View Post
    The tuner is pretty highly respected and did an excellent job of getting my car running...
    Looking at your hardware and the screen shot of the injector setup, I'd say your highly respected tuner missed a few things.

    1) You should never have a straight diagonal line for IFR. If the regulator is not manifold referenced (yours IS), then this table should have a slight bend in it as it follows Bernoulli's law for change in flow versus pressure. It should be a square root function, so NOT a straight line. Straight lines mean he took a shortcut that does NOT always work out nice when trying to fix AFR issues.
    2) Manifold referenced regulators (like yours) need a HORIZONTAL straight line.
    3) With any change in injectors there are also changes to a few other tables (short pulse adjust, offset vs voltage) that MUST be changed or you will have more problems like I said in #1 above.
    ~Greg
    Calibrated Success - EFI Training and Tuning Done Right
    GM Beginner's Guide DVD available now through Summit!
    Engine Management: Advanced Tuning - Amazon's best deal for the EFI crowd.

  5. #15
    Lifetime Member Rich Z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    291

    Default

    Well, to me it was a huge step forward just getting my car driveable. When I drove it back home from the second shop "working" on it, I wasn't sure I was going to be able to make it the 50 miles back to my garage. And yeah, when I saw that IFR table in this tune, an alarm went off. I did know enough about it to think it didn't look as it should. When I was rebuilding my fuel system (you wouldn't believe what the guy who installed it had done) I looked into the issue of using a mapped FPR versus an unmapped one, and about half of the people (pretty much par for the course with anything I have ever asked about concerning my car) said mapped was the way to go. Logically it seemed to make sense to me, so that is the route I decided to take. Certainly doesn't mean I was correct in my decision, though.

    Actually my car drives pretty well (aside from an intermittent and nagging drive train squeal on clutch engagement), but the issue upppermost in my mind at the moment is if things are worse that I think (or hope) with the fuel delivery.

    I started wrenching on my own car because I stopped trusting nearly everyone else to touch it. I'm hoping this IFR thing is just a minor mistake by the tuner, but I am not willing to blindly trust someone when my engine could be in jeopardy. So if I have to learn this tuning stuff now, then that is just what I have to do.

    I am a raw newbie with this. Read some books (actually, Greg, some of yours) but my retention is not what it used to be when I was younger. Lately I have been looking over the tables in the tune the tuner did for me and reading some threads here, as well as the tutorials. Quite honestly, everyone seems to know what most of the acronyms stand for but me. So it's tough going at the bottom of this learning curve I am at.

    Can I get some help here? The top priority, in my opinion, is to make sure the tune in my car right now is SAFE. If the IFR table AND the mapped fuel pressure regulator are both controlling fuel pressure to the fuel rails, well that does make me somewhat nervous. Can I start a new thread in the proper forum here, post my tune, and have someone look at it and give me advice? I did a log of a drive I took back on 12/07, but I just let the log capture the entire time. Therefore it is quite a large file. But I can attach it here if it will help and there are no limits on the file size. I think it's 800K or so, if I remember correctly. I can see that running at 10 mph (I live on a dirt road) the engine RPM and spark advance is jumping all over the place. But things leveled out once I got up to a normal speed. It's a 2 bar map speed density tune, I believe.

    What I would like to do is to first make certain my engine is in no danger, and then afterwards get some handholding, when needed, to learn this stuff. Heck, I've got to figure out how to hook up the wideband REAL SOON, I guess. I am in NO hurry with this, and want to take the time to learn this. Heck, my car has been tied up for three years now, so what's several more months? I just want it to be RIGHT when the smoke clears.

    Thank you.

    CorvetteFlorida.com

    2002 Corvette Z06
    427 RHS block built by LME
    STS rear mounted twin turbos
    It nearly died on the operating table, but I'm bringing her back.

  6. #16
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    178

    Default

    You may not like this answer, but the proper solution is to re-enter the injector characterization correctly and start over on the MAF and VE tables. The injector flow AND offset AND short pulse adjust all need to be correct before touching the MAF/VE to avoid baking in weird errors and driveability quirks. Ideally, this would get calibrated on a load bearing dyno in steady state before heading to road tuning. Trust me when I say that 2hrs on dyno can get more work done than 2 weeks on the road in most cases. You just need to follow a valid calibration method and things almost fall into place. Done correctly, there's really no need for a custom operating system.
    ~Greg
    Calibrated Success - EFI Training and Tuning Done Right
    GM Beginner's Guide DVD available now through Summit!
    Engine Management: Advanced Tuning - Amazon's best deal for the EFI crowd.

  7. #17
    Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    96

    Default

    What year is your Corvette, if I recall 97-98 were the return style and the 99+ Corvettes were returnless. If it is a 99+ then the builder would have had to install a return line to the gas tanks for you to be MAP referenced and this was often done when a turbocharger was added.

  8. #18
    Lifetime Member Rich Z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    291

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by eficalibrator View Post
    You may not like this answer, but the proper solution is to re-enter the injector characterization correctly and start over on the MAF and VE tables. The injector flow AND offset AND short pulse adjust all need to be correct before touching the MAF/VE to avoid baking in weird errors and driveability quirks. Ideally, this would get calibrated on a load bearing dyno in steady state before heading to road tuning. Trust me when I say that 2hrs on dyno can get more work done than 2 weeks on the road in most cases. You just need to follow a valid calibration method and things almost fall into place. Done correctly, there's really no need for a custom operating system.
    Oh, I've gotten a lot of answers I haven't liked over the past couple of years, so this is nothing new to me.

    The tuner sent me an email this morning, so I'm going to work with him. I don't have a dyno available anywhere near me that I am aware of (at least none that are owned by shops that I would trust taking my car to), and I've got the time to spend here doing this on the road. Luckily I'm in the boonies, so long stretches of road with no traffic are not hard to come by.

    I could always run the car up to the tuner, if I wanted to do a 6 hour drive to get there, I suppose. He seems like a good guy and if he is willing to stand behind his work and give me the opportunity to learn this stuff somewhat myself doing this remotely with my being the hands and eyes, then that is OK with me. He's probably too busy to be an actual mentor to me, but I'll take what I can get at this point. And heck, I spent a good chunk of change for this tune, and quite honestly I can't just throw that away.

    Guess I'd better get cracking to hook up that wideband.

    Thank you.

    CorvetteFlorida.com

    2002 Corvette Z06
    427 RHS block built by LME
    STS rear mounted twin turbos
    It nearly died on the operating table, but I'm bringing her back.

  9. #19
    Joe (Moderator) joecar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Posts
    28,403

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by eficalibrator View Post
    Looking at your hardware and the screen shot of the injector setup, I'd say your highly respected tuner missed a few things.

    1) You should never have a straight diagonal line for IFR. If the regulator is not manifold referenced (yours IS), then this table should have a slight bend in it as it follows Bernoulli's law for change in flow versus pressure. It should be a square root function, so NOT a straight line. Straight lines mean he took a shortcut that does NOT always work out nice when trying to fix AFR issues.
    2) Manifold referenced regulators (like yours) need a HORIZONTAL straight line.
    3) With any change in injectors there are also changes to a few other tables (short pulse adjust, offset vs voltage) that MUST be changed or you will have more problems like I said in #1 above.
    +1.



    Quote Originally Posted by eficalibrator View Post
    You may not like this answer, but the proper solution is to re-enter the injector characterization correctly and start over on the MAF and VE tables. The injector flow AND offset AND short pulse adjust all need to be correct before touching the MAF/VE to avoid baking in weird errors and driveability quirks. Ideally, this would get calibrated on a load bearing dyno in steady state before heading to road tuning. Trust me when I say that 2hrs on dyno can get more work done than 2 weeks on the road in most cases. You just need to follow a valid calibration method and things almost fall into place. Done correctly, there's really no need for a custom operating system.
    +1.

  10. #20
    Lifetime Member Rich Z's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Posts
    291

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Gordy M View Post
    What year is your Corvette, if I recall 97-98 were the return style and the 99+ Corvettes were returnless. If it is a 99+ then the builder would have had to install a return line to the gas tanks for you to be MAP referenced and this was often done when a turbocharger was added.
    It's a 2002 Z06. Oh you wouldn't believe what the "builder" did to the fuel system. When I got it back home, I discovered that there was no fuel filter in the system at all. Not sure what sort of fuel line fittings he used, but they were disintegrating and sending metal particles into the fuel. Completely trashed the fuel injectors, of course. The external Aeromotive fuel pump was not only installed completely wrong, but it was positioned right above the wastegate for the turbos. And my passenger side fuel tank wasn't even hooked up. I had to completely redo ALL of that. Heck, rather than going into all of the details about what these guys did to my car and drive this way off topic, here's a complete blow by blow description -> http://www.corvetteflorida.com/forum...ad.php?t=44697. Any of you that frequent CorvetteForum might have seen a similar thread over there as well. But when the mods closed it down because I called Pfadt to the carpet for sending my builder a carbon fiber drive shaft that was TOO LONG, well, I didn't need to continue the discussion any longer over there anyway.

    But back on track, yes, the fuel system is pretty much all custom. Dual pumps from Lonnie's Performance. F.A.S.T. fuel rails, etc. I'm not a Corvette tech by any stretch, but after having two shops nearly destroy my car, I brought it back home and figured it was up to me to save it. So yeah, I'm learning a LOT. All things considered, I believe I need to learn this tuning stuff now. I'm just hoping that some of you guys here will lend me an ear and provide advice so I don't do something stupid based on ignorance of the dangerous waters I might want to jump into.

    CorvetteFlorida.com

    2002 Corvette Z06
    427 RHS block built by LME
    STS rear mounted twin turbos
    It nearly died on the operating table, but I'm bringing her back.

Page 2 of 3 FirstFirst 123 LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. B4001 Injector Flow Rate table help
    By kwhiteside in forum Gen III V8 Specific
    Replies: 14
    Last Post: June 30th, 2009, 11:45 AM
  2. injector flow rate table
    By stripes in forum Gen III V8 Specific
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: May 18th, 2008, 05:44 AM
  3. Injector Flow Rate correction of VE Table
    By oztracktuning in forum General (Petrol, Gas, Ethanol)
    Replies: 30
    Last Post: February 12th, 2006, 03:14 PM
  4. Injector Flow Rate Table
    By WicketMike in forum General (Petrol, Gas, Ethanol)
    Replies: 23
    Last Post: December 31st, 2005, 07:21 AM
  5. the injector flow rate table..
    By ZL1Killa in forum General (Petrol, Gas, Ethanol)
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: August 10th, 2005, 02:17 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •