Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

im not a tuner but it seems like you have a fair bit of timing, not only in the cruise region but in the high load/revs area.

are you just using the PFC to monitor knock? your using a wideband to monitor A:F ratio? what gear have you been tuning in?

  • Replies 44
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

ok so i have checked alot of things. i now have my PLX wideband AFR setup installed (o2 sensor is in down pipe just before the cat)

fuel map seems to be more than fine...its just the default apexi map for the RB25.

i have strated again with the timing and will repost the timing up very soon...not going quite as hard as before. but event with the first post there was very little knock (all under 20)

ok so i have checked alot of things. i now have my PLX wideband AFR setup installed (o2 sensor is in down pipe just before the cat)

fuel map seems to be more than fine...its just the default apexi map for the RB25.

i have strated again with the timing and will repost the timing up very soon...not going quite as hard as before. but event with the first post there was very little knock (all under 20)

You guys need to be very careful tuning using only the knock sensor. Although they are 'usually' quite good, we get many, many cars where they are asleep on the job.

We can often audibly hear knock way before the sensor picks up anything.

So best to double check before relying on the snsor alone.

cheers.

im not a tuner but it seems like you have a fair bit of timing, not only in the cruise region but in the high load/revs area.

are you just using the PFC to monitor knock? your using a wideband to monitor A:F ratio? what gear have you been tuning in?

I have a very similar map to that in the high load/RPM area...what the typical amount of advance used up there? Im thinking of pulling a cople of degrees out to make it 19-20deg total advance up there ( i have 8.7:1 comp instead of 9:1)

Timing in the top end can vary from car to car. I have tuned a car that had 32deg of timing on 20psi of boost and i have tuned other cars that could not handle more then 10deg timing on 15psi of boost.

Timing on cruise. The reason why I like to run it a bit retarded is because after a long drive on the freeway say 20 mins, if i need to give it a blat to get around a truck or because someone made a mistake and i want to get out of the way, rah rah rah :P I dont want my cyl's to be cooked when i chuck in 25psi of boost into them....

A cool cyl is a happy cyl. You run them very hot, chuck alot of fuel into them.. what do you THINK your going to get??

If you dont know, i suggest uninstalling your fcedit software immediatly.

Sorry waffles i know everyone has to start somewhere, but looking at that map makes me cringe. I dont mind helping you get it in order though! dont get me wrong!

Does your wideband have pc software that gives you a dyno like graph read out ? mine does and if you set it up it can help you heaps when doing power tests.

Cheers

guilt toy... i would love you help!

my wideband goes straight into the datalogit (0-5V:10-20AFR)

i am only running 1bar of boost...and dont really wanna go higher...

as for how the cylinders reat to diferent temperatures well i dont know the exact science....but i will learn. and uninstalling the fcedit software is not how you learn.

if i blow up my engine i dont care....$1500 for a new one or less...whatever...i can hear rattle (as in i know what it sounds like) and i have made it rattle so i know where she absolute boundries are. i and will stay well away form them.

i dont want to just drive my car, i want to know 100% how it all work and whats going one...i'll learn about the science too along the way.

so if you have any book you suggest i read or anywhere to look then please suggest.

have you seen the new map i'm running...the new map has no more than max 9deg adv in the area of n03:p03 to n12:p12 over the default apexi map...everything else is the same...

i may have to pull a little timing out of the higher p rows such as 15 onwards...

" I can hear rattle ( as in I know what it sounds like) and I have made it rattle so i know where she absolute boundries are. i and will stay well away form them."

Rattle is easy to hear. It's the insidious tick,tick that you/sensor can't easily hear that slowly eats away at the engine.

It sometimes shows up as an extra 10-15 on the knock count, but also sometimes it doesn't.

cheers

I think you should call me and organise to come for a visit and we can spend a few hours driving around and tweaking if you like. Do you still have my number? PM me if you need it again.

Maybe a couple of hours on the dyno will help you learn a bit :)

But yeah I would look at reducing the timing on your cruise part of the map. It would be a good starting point.

guilt toy... i would love you help!

my wideband goes straight into the datalogit (0-5V:10-20AFR)

i am only running 1bar of boost...and dont really wanna go higher...

as for how the cylinders reat to diferent temperatures well i dont know the exact science....but i will learn. and uninstalling the fcedit software is not how you learn.

if i blow up my engine i dont care....$1500 for a new one or less...whatever...i can hear rattle (as in i know what it sounds like) and i have made it rattle so i know where she absolute boundries are. i and will stay well away form them.

i dont want to just drive my car, i want to know 100% how it all work and whats going one...i'll learn about the science too along the way.

so if you have any book you suggest i read or anywhere to look then please suggest.

have you seen the new map i'm running...the new map has no more than max 9deg adv in the area of n03:p03 to n12:p12 over the default apexi map...everything else is the same...

i may have to pull a little timing out of the higher p rows such as 15 onwards...

when you do a power run on your car, does it go all the way to the bottom line?

i have mine pretty close, maybe a few less degrees on light load, ignore the top end i'm running gt30 at 18-20 psi

post-34685-1209969674_thumb.jpg

when you do a power run on your car, does it go all the way to the bottom line?

17 psi might run to row 15, 20 psi its goes to row 16, on a cold night might flash a couple of cells on row 17,

with a vg30 afm highest voltage i see is 4.7 - 4.8

what you thinking?

if i were you i would drop line 17 down to 11, then on 18 go down to 8 then on 19 go to 6 and on 20 go down to 4...

You never know when your car might overboost and yours will keep running 12deg all the way which will cause unnessesary detonation when you shouldnt ever be going there unless something is wrong...

I do this on my tunes as a habbit for being over carefull i guess..

Heaps and heaps of timing on cruise too! makes the car feel good on cruise i must admit.

yeh good idea, i'm pretty sure the fuel does add alot extra as it goes lower!

as for the light load i keep a good eye on the count, only ever see low 20's if i load it up in too high a gear, so it cant be too bad!

a possible gain there would be better fuel economy, i only played in that area to get back what putting a bigger exhaust housing lost in spool time and did it over a few tuning sessions so its hard to say yeh i can feel difference!

you can still use ignition to make the turbo come on quicker, which does not effect the cruise on the freeway where you have the timing in high 40's.

your tune, up to you ...

post up the ign timing map once you fix up the bottom to lower timing if you can.

Rattle is easy to hear. It's the insidious tick,tick that you/sensor can't easily hear that slowly eats away at the engine.

It sometimes shows up as an extra 10-15 on the knock count, but also sometimes it doesn't.

cheers

thats the bit that has me worried. my car is 100% standard and 7psi boost in the midrange makes it ping hard sometimes (other times it's perfect). makes me wonder if stock (4-5psi) is ok *bites fingernails*

(timing has been checked - mine landed with 18deg and i put it back to 15)

bring it to me i will fix it.

Your timing in the mid range needs to be checked.

thats the bit that has me worried. my car is 100% standard and 7psi boost in the midrange makes it ping hard sometimes (other times it's perfect). makes me wonder if stock (4-5psi) is ok *bites fingernails*

(timing has been checked - mine landed with 18deg and i put it back to 15)

Timing in the top end can vary from car to car. I have tuned a car that had 32deg of timing on 20psi of boost and i have tuned other cars that could not handle more then 10deg timing on 15psi of boost.

Are you talking total timing or what you're seeing on the PFC? The 32 degrees sounds like total but if you were running 10 degrees total hell I doubt you'd make any power! Sorry but that comparison doesn't make any sence!

Most people I know set their 'lines to 15 degrees base with a timing light before doing any tuning. If you want to it makes comparing ignition maps a lot easier. It's surprising how many so called gun tuners don't even know what the car's base timing is. All well and good but if someone changes the timing belt or whatever and sets the car to the norm 15 degrees where before it was 13 then that's not much chop. Ping...

At the moment at full load I'm running 15 degrees base + 18 on the laptop so 33 degrees total.

I'm interested in seeing what other guys are running at full noise with similar turbos.

Cheers

Edited by gtst25

"At the moment at full load I'm running 15 degrees base + 18 on the laptop so 33 degrees total."

Um no.....

You are running 18 degrees at full load which is about ballpark correct.

15 degrees is what the PFC feeds the engine at warm idle.

This is from a idle map activated by the tps being below .5v

Once tps value is >.5v, which basically tells the ECU that we are now off idle, it reverts to the main ign map.

This is why you can change the values in the first 3 x 3 cells and get no change in the idle timing.

So if you correctly set your 'base' timing to 15 degs (also checking on the H/C that is what timing is being delivered), then you are ensuring that the values you use in the timing map IS what the engine receives.

Hope that helps.

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

    • @joshuaho96 Hmm considering the drama you've seen/experienced, have you looked into getting a built complete long motor shipped from Australia?  Considering the AUD is basically monopoly money when compared to the USD, at a glance this seems like a good option?
    • Bloody Skylines, they put you through the bloody wringer! Stick at it! Stunning drag strip BTW! Where is it? Can see part of the name on the slip and probably should just Google it!
    • I mean the other day I had to walk someone through diagnosing why their timing belt was walking off the cam gears. At least one of the issues was a bent tensioner stud. Local mechanics have found runout on the CAS mechanism causing weird failures. I'm also no saint here I've documented some of the things I've had to learn the hard way. Something I discovered recently is that my CA emissions catalytic converters weren't even welded correctly to align the downpipe to the main cat and they tossed the support bracket that goes from the transfer case to the downpipe to support everything there. I spend a lot of time chasing down these decidedly unsexy problems and the net effect is it feels like I never actually get to the original objective (flex fuel, VCAM, oil control, cooling, etc).
    • At times with how you make everything sound, all I imagine Americans doing when they see a gtr is standing there looking at it and bashing it with a gun like how a caveman would with a club and hoping it fixes itself 
    • I think this is just a product of how the US market works for this stuff. Shops are expensive and there's no real way of knowing what kind of results you're going to get, people don't really have the institutional knowledge. I have heard too much at this point to really put faith in anybody "full service" except maybe DSport and they aren't really a full service kind of shop. If you go to the right place I have no doubt they'll get it right for you. Some locals have set it up right but the cost really is nuts and even now they're still fighting issues. And you know I'm a crazy person who thinks things like twin scroll, relatively short low-mount cast headers, PCV recirc to intake, recirculating BOV, right-sized for ~400 whp, MAF load, validating all of that to a standard comparable to OEM test programs, etc are relevant. For what it's worth, multiple local owners at this point have been stuck in a perpetual cycle of blowing a motor -> getting someone to rebuild it -> some missed detail causes the bearings to wipe and spin just outside of break-in mileage or drop valves or some other catastrophe -> cycle repeats. I usually only find out about this because I'm perpetually helping random friends with diagnosing car troubles, Skyline or otherwise. The single turbo stuff if I'm honest is mostly secondary, it just doesn't seem to achieve the numbers in the ~2000-3000 rpm region that I would expect given the results I've seen here or in Motive's videos. I don't really know what we're missing here in the US to be causing this. Lots of people like to emphasize the necessity of finishing the project first and foremost, but I'm not made of money and I can't afford to be trashing a 15k+ USD engine build with any regularity. Or spending my relatively limited garage time these days unable to triangulate problems because too much was changed all at once. Also, even if it isn't a catastrophic failure I would consider spending the cost of single turbo conversion with nothing to show for it to be pretty bad. 
×
×
  • Create New...