Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

you can have too high knocking, and too low knocking, ie if its too low aka zero, its not tuned hard enough

Got to disagree with you there Paul. If it's knocking, it's bad. Full stop. Knock kills engines.

The issue is if a sensor output of 30 is actually knock, or "general noise". Use of a proper stethoscope and comparing against observed readings is the way to really determine that.

However I would look to keep those readings less than 30, and less than 20 under high load areas.

Edit: reading the OP, you need to identify if it is high LOAD, or high RPM. They are different axes on the map. And if you are reading off the hand controller there is no way of readily identifying which cells are the offenders.

Has anything else changed, including a fresh batch of fuel just after the plug change that might be of questionable quality? Sometimes the cause of things you observe isn't always evident immediately.

Edited by Dale FZ1

No matter how much timing I pull out I always get knock up to about 35. I've had people listen to it on the dyno and we weren't able to hear any pinging when it would get up to this level. On full throttle it usually only gets to 25. The time it jumps up to 30 or above is when I back off the throttle. It has done this for quite awhile and I still haven't melted any pistons.

Hence my comments above. The sensors are just a microphone that converts vibrations to an analogue signal. There will be variance between sensors as to what output signal is thrown to the ECU is associated with actual knock.

However, common consensus seems to be that numbers at 20 and lower are distractors. If the OP was concerned, he should be having some action taken with a stethoscope.

i always get knock reading at the exact point i back off, unless they're huge numbers, ignore them.

OP: try taking a couple of degrees out accross the board in the temp adjustment, if it still does it then it can be ignored, if not then it probably needs 1 or 2 degrees dropped out in 1 or 2 cells. 20-30 is probably fine but it might be lightly pinging, which isnt desireable

thanks for all you help.

i have replaced the plugs with BCPR6ES. The knock counts jumped to from 8 to 23counts in the first 10 cells low rpm and low loads.

The high loads knock count was 19 max. ie not the fuel problem.

Since then i have got myself a datalogit and i have reduced the timing by as high as 8 degrees to see the knock count dropped to 8counts...

From some of your comments in the low loads/rpm the knock count can go as high as 20... Could you please confirm?... i have read somewhere saying the the first 10 cells loads/rpm should keep the knock count less than 10... i could be wrong... :D My high loads have never gone pass 20 ever.

once again thanks.

if you had to take 8 degrees out then its unlikely it was pinging. use the graph function to go through and see exactly what knock readings your getting and where, its useful for sorting out random spikes from proper knock

Got to disagree with you there Paul. If it's knocking, it's bad. Full stop. Knock kills engines.

Gotta disagree with you on that one :D

Not often I disagree with you either…

Paul’s point was there must be “some” noise on the knock sensor. If there isn’t there it is clearly fubar and not reporting correctly.

You have to have noise, that is what combustion is.

What is “normal” for a RB knock sensor is anything from 10-30 @ any part of load/rpm/map.

Much more than 30 and you probably need a cell or two that needs attending too…

OR… one of the other two options.

1. Your knock sensor is fubar

2. Your knock sensor is picking up other noise, ie a loose starter motor or something rattling around, or thats just 'how it is'. Sometimes they just pickup 40 no matter what!

Low load knock levels up to 100 won't hurt anything.

And like was said above, knock can be caused by many different things so make sure it's not just interference. If you have 20 knock below 3000rpm, that is the best place to have it if you've gotta have it somewhere. At those engine loads it can simply not be doing any damage.

Drive ANY new manual car and put a knock box on. You'd freak out if you saw the knock levels when you stand on the accel or take off from the lights. But because it's at low load, it's fine.

Gotta disagree with you on that one :)

Not often I disagree with you either…

Paul’s point was there must be “some” noise on the knock sensor. If there isn’t there it is clearly fubar and not reporting correctly.

You have to have noise, that is what combustion is.

What is “normal” for a RB knock sensor is anything from 10-30 @ any part of load/rpm/map.

Much more than 30 and you probably need a cell or two that needs attending too…

OR… one of the other two options.

1. Your knock sensor is fubar

2. Your knock sensor is picking up other noise, ie a loose start motor or something rattling around, or thats just 'how it is'. Sometimes they just pickup 40 no matter what!

+1

tap a spanner on your intake runner gently and watch it go through the roof.

Rattling clutch, alternator, timing belt bearing, water pump can all be causes for 'noise'.

And so can the beginnings of a spun bearing.

OP: Don't treat it as nothing, just don't be overly concerned about it. And take it somewhere that has an electronic steth they can hook up or a knock box to put your mind at ease. Every engine is slightly different in frequency so your ECU might read worse on a different engine, it might read better, but the point is the readings are normal.

  • 4 weeks later...

I started getting a slight high count on my r34, 25-30, then one day i got a random 150 on my power fc!!! but the car was running sweet no pinging at all (and at 150 the car would hardely run).

i took it straight to my tuner and he took out a shit load of timing as a saftey precaution. he had the thing for a week checking different things done so many power runs it wasnt funny. out of every 5 runs he would get a wierd 100+ count but he had his own knock detection set up and heard nothing i was even there!

the motor has forged internals so should withstand higher than normal knock but no knock is the best, car runs sweet tho...

but any ideas faulty sensors etc?

could be anything rattling in the engine bay near the knock sensors, or could just be a rooted sensor.

knock readings on limiter are almost always false, if its been tuned properly it should have a touch less timing on limiter for safety, not like you need lots of power up there anyway

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

    • You've just discovered a really good reason to tell yourself, yes, I do need to buy an aftermarket ECU. Put the MAF in the bin. Slap in the new ECU and have a think about what turbo sounds you prefer.  Do you want a 90's style BOV wooosh? Do you want a hektik tsututututu?  Mate, can't go wrong. Just gotta get that ECU and the world is your oyster. 
    • Hi. Iam just curisou about this topic. I saw this video. It is about Greddy Type FV2. I know that BoVs are about that sound but how and when to use it? I read some topic here and from what i have understand on stock RB with MAF there will be some "problems" if you use this BoV? It vents the air in to the atmosphere and the MAF on stock car needs this air back in to the intake and not out? Or is it wrong? If so...i saw you can put some adaptor to circule air back...but does that not "loose" that sound? I saw another BoV from Turbosmart and it has two "exhaust" like ports? One is for the stock tubing for letting air back and one is for "sound" and let the air in the atmosphere? Can someone please explain? This is the Greddy one:  And this is the Turbosmart.     THANK YOU!! EDIT: So i read about this topic some more and i if i understand that correctly: That Greddy can function either like BoV or 100% Bypass valve? And that Turbosmart is what they called hybrid so you can adjust what and how many air can be vented out or back in? Is this right? THX!
    • That dirty voltage drop is the culprit I suspect 
    • i cant get them all in 1 screenshot unfortunately as i just dont know how to move things around tbh, but they are all from the same log and the line crosses at the same point for all of them
    • It's about time I start work on my sun tan. So I knocked up a few parts that will all combine together to become my new power steering reservoir. Now just to produce an abundance of UV and IR rays while melting a heap of bits of alu to become one... Well, that's after I put one more hole in it for the return line to plumb to. It likely won't be this weekend, as Sunday I'm meant to be in doing some last minute stuff to the AMG race car, and the weekend after will be filled with non my Skyline stuff, followed by Bathurst 6 hour. So I don't expect to get to melt metal for at least 3 weeks.   I also managed to stuff up and start cutting the hole for the res to pump pipe on the wrong side of the line... It means instead of the lines being nice and tight against the inner guard, they'll be out off the guard.    The size of it means I should end up with about 1.8L of power steering fluid, and still have space for another half a litre before it reaches the overflow/breather. This is wayyyyyyy more capacity than factory, which should help keep Powersteer oil temps lower, and the design hopefully allows it to prevent any aerated oil being able to makes its way down to the bottom as it'll have a couple of baffles and some hopeful trickery to force air bubbles away from the bottom.
×
×
  • Create New...