my3awds wrote:Ah, it makes perfect sense. So, in a sense, one could boost a 1.8, and run low boost (3-5psi) on 91+octane and fight the effects of high timing in Openloop with just an rrfpr, theoretically.
Yes, pretty much. Except -- again, be careful with terminology. In the context of engine management, "open loop" and "closed loop" usually refer to fuel. They don't have anything to do with spark. The loop in question is the feedback loop completed by the oxygen sensor.
Spark timing is actually controlled by another feedback loop, with the feedback provided by the knock sensor. This feedback loop is active pretty much all of the time as far as I know.
And yes, a low-boost turbo setup will often do just fine with an appropriate RRFPR and without extra timing controls as long as you use the highest-octane fuel you have available and you have a capable enough fuel pump.
Also, it would make sense then that an rrfpr has the same effects of solely getting larger injectors, based on your explination (unless I don't understand it correctly). The ecu would tell the injector to hold the valve open for the same X amount of time at open loop, but you would get more fuel since you've increased the size of the valve. In both cases, you would have to adjust your closed loop operation accordingly, but you'd get the same effect right?
Not quite. There's a little more magic to an RRFPR. An RRFPR increases the pressure across the differentials
in proportion to manifold pressure. Furthermore, the more sophisticated RRFPRs don't even act until manifold pressure goes above atmospheric. That means that at low loads the RRFPR has minimal (for the simpler ones) or zero (for the better ones) effect at all. So off-boost fueling remains exactly the same as it was stock!
Neat, eh?
The only bad thing is they don't have freeware scan tools for us 1.8 impreza users like you've created for the 2.2t legacy ecu. I think the only hope is that vwrx software, but the cable might not even work properly on our cars.
The cable should. You'd just need to figure out all the parameters, their addresses, and their transfer functions.
Maybe one day I'll modify my scantool for your ECU. I just owe the XT6 guys an attempt at theirs first.
I was planning on using an S-ITC to pull timing at 10+ boost psi, since I already have an S-AFC, but it sounds like you don't recommend using this to retard timing. Is there a particular reason why? I was planning on simply pulling back about 10 degrees at the top of the RPM band, and just tuning out the rest with the safc & rrfpr and monitor it via wideband/knocklite. I know sounds crude, but I'm not sure what else to go by when you can't see how much timing you have.
I just don't recommend it because it's so crude as you say, and because it seems like the bang for the buck isn't very good.
I'll repeat that I'm no expert, so don't give my opinion more weight than it's really worth.
But an S-AFC plus an S-ITC are gonna run you somewhere in the vicinity of 500 dollars, right? That's so much money! With that kind of cash you could buy a J&S SafeGuard which can retard timing as boost increases while also greatly improving upon the stock ECU's knock correction (wait -- does your ECU even
have knock correction?). A SafeGuard plus an RRFPR would do great!
Or you could probably pay someone less than $500 to build you a harness to make an EJ22T ECU practically plug right into your car, and you'd have the right ECU for your engine. OEM reliability and robustness with no need for tuning.
"Just reading vrg3's convoluted, information-packed posts made me feel better all over again." -- subyluvr2212