
Also, would it be such a bad idea to add a pod filter instead?
Thanks
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I don't know what unit you were referring to, but like I said, MAF voltage shot up, and engine load hit the ceiling. I'll have to try again tomorrow and see what the fuel injectors do.Legacy777 wrote:To test it someone with an n/a motor would need to watch the alpha correction # on the select monitor or Vikash's ECU scanner program to see if the number goes severely negative anywhere in the rpm/load range.
Did you ever know that you're my hero,Soul Shinobi wrote:Now, below about 1,500 RPM, if I mat the throttle in first gear, the car bogs massively, MAF voltage shoots to 2.8-ish and engine load reads 100. I think that's the issue we're looking at here.
Depending on what you look at, it's called different things. The FSM calls it "Correction Coefficient of air-fuel ratio (ALPHA)".Soul Shinobi wrote:... I've just realized what Legacy777 meant by "watch the alpha correction # ... to see if the number goes severely negative." He was referring to Fuel Trim (isn't it called lambda, not alpha?). That'd be better to watch than Duty Cycle. Not only if I could make some graphs like those ones ciper sourced from NASIOC. Guess we'd need a new program for that, oh well. OBD-II would help...