Quote Originally Posted by dfe1
I was begining to wonder if anybody got it. Sig used to be 7+1=10, then F+1=10. Figured it needed another change, so I went to the binary version. I used to work on octal systems as well. One of the best stories is the time we were installing an electronic cash register system in a department store and some electricians were on site. We were counting cable pairs coming into the system and you should have seen their faces when we counted 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,10, then went on to 16, 17, 20. They couldn't understand what happened to 8, 9, 18 and 19. Ever try to explain an octal or hex system to someone?

As for your EFILive questions, every table in the tuning software is numbered. B3334 is the DFCO Spark Ramp In Rate table, B3335 is the Ramp Out table. It's a little confusing at first, but all you have to do is enter the table number in the navigator window and hit search. The system will display he table for you. It might not be a bad idea to download the software from the EFILive web site and begin looking through it before you get your system.
lol...

How about base 36 (...I think IBM did use base 36 a long time ago...)...

Base 36 uses the digits 0-9 and A-Z, so... Z + 1 = 10