Quote Originally Posted by GMPX View Post
Not sure why it would add fuel.
The value is a direct multiplication of the VE table numbers.
Lets assume your VE number is 1.000.
If your IAT table value was 1.010 then 1.000 x 1.010 = 1.010
If your IAT table value was 0.950 then 1.000 x 0.950 = 0.950
So given that the VE numbers end up lower I'm not sure how it could cause a rich condition.

Cheers,
Ross
Well it does haha. My IAT temp table starts with values below 1.00 and then moves to number above 1.00 in hotter IAT's. If its supposed to work the way you say, I should be starting with higher numbers to lower, but its just not the case. TAQuickness has found the same thing, and he was using the same OS I am.

Here is an example of my table:

LABELS IAT VE Multiplier (Factor)
IAT °F {link: SAE.IAT} Value
-40 0.991943
-22 0.994724
-4 0.995921
14 0.997118
32 0.998115
50 0.999113
68 1.000000
86 1.001307
104 1.002105
122 1.002903
140 1.003418
158 1.004150
176 1.004883
194 1.006348
212 1.007080
230 1.000000
248 1.000000
266 1.000000
284 1.000000

If I have a number above 1.00 in colder IAT's, it would lean out really bad. A number below 1.00 richens it up.

Best,
Adrian