Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Does someone know what the Latency Setting is for, as in, what it affects in performance if you get the value incorrect?

Are there dangers, loss of power, emmisions etc???

Reason I'm asking is I've just installed s15, 450cc injectors.

I have them in and running perfectly but i can use 2 different setting on the Latency correction and to me, it seems to be exactly the same (Power FC settings)

I've used :

+ 0.12 and

- 0.06

Negative 0.06 i think is correct using the calculation method in the FC FAQ (thanks Paul!) but i also tried Positive 0.12 as someone more experienced than me already had these little babies in and running on that setting.

Any info appreciated :P

(......and if you're interested in s15 injectors and how they're going, there's another thread in here, probably 5-6 posts away about the info and install)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/166461-injector-latency/
Share on other sites

hey mate i'm pretty sure that the latency is the time it takes to operate the injector ie time its switched on to the time its actually open fully, there will be some lag hence the need for the settings. you could probably have them way out and it may not matter.....? might give it a try.....

as long as you've got the percentages right thats the main thing so it doesn't chuck in too much fuel, it should be ok

From the Motec site :

Injector Dead Time

Injector dead time refers to the LATENCY of the injector in producing maximum flow rate. All injectors require a certain amount of time to open completely and produce maximum flow. The amount of time is dependant on several variables including; fuel pressure, battery voltage and physical characteristics of the injectors themselves. Typically higher fuel pressure or lower battery voltage tends to increase the dead time. This leads to a reduction in fuel flow in to the engine and as a result influences the engine's state of tune.

Hey There,

Sounds familiar =) >> http://www.skylinesaustralia.com/forums/in...=161243&hl=

You'll find its old latency minus new latency... thats the figure you put in.

From what i figure, apart from a setting that might be easier on the ECU, Inj drivers, or coils.... the setting has really little effect.

Batch firing, fires most of the injectors at the back of a closed inlet valve, whole 360' OUT... let alone a handful of milliseconds.

I'm of the belief, it doesn't matter so much.

Cheers

Edited by GeeTR

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • How do you go about diagnosing ecu's that don't have data logging, is it more experience at that point and just trying out things that you think will fix the issue?
    • Stock O2 are basically useless beyond anything at stoich. Any misfire will also be seen as lean. The stock O2 also read a collective exhaust gas volume, not each cylinder. Sputtering and missing means not each cycle is firing, and some are. Which means even if rich, as shit, on cylinders as they miss, they'll read lean, but the cylinders that did fire will read rich, and combined, well, they can read anything from rich to lean.   Start with the basics before even going looking at sensor values.   Edit: I say the above, and that's coming from the guy with a few thousand dollars worth of scan tools sitting right beside me right now that I use frequently for my job.
    • I just finished up a manual swap and I have a 1999 S2 AWD automatic in my garage, depending on where you are located. I'm in the the midwest of the US.
    • I’ve heard it can be done, you need to redrill the holes where they bolt to the chassis and apart from that they are the same. I’ve never done it or know anyone personally that has, it’s just something I’ve heard 
    • If it's reading full rich prior to a misfire that gives one directional hint, if it's already reading lean, etc. If it's reading pretty cleanly stoichiometric then suddenly drops out from a misfire that suggests it's not air mass estimation that's the problem. Could be ignition, could be something more subtle. Could be the CAS has decided to start dropping out at random or the drive pin is worn leading to excessive lash and trigger errors. LTFT can tell you the same but it's slower to react and if this is a recent issue it might not have stabilized. STFT stuck in one direction vs fluctuating back and forth can be used instead but I like to read O2 voltages anyways and interpret directly. If the O2 voltages make no sense in general or are super slow to react it could also be a failing O2 sensor. There's no real error correction for failing O2 sensors in these cars.
×
×
  • Create New...