Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Has anyone thought about the tuning issues with running screamer vs plumbed back waste gate pipe?

Obviously exhaust gas is being vented to atmosphere with a screamer, exhaust gas contains unburnt fuel, so would that mean that the O2 sensor is getting an incorrect reading in terms or rich or leanness of the tune because it is only seeing say 80% of the true exhaust gas?

This could also play a part in plumbed back systems which enter back into the exhaust after the position of the O2 sensor, which also isnt seeing the correct AFR readings. Obviously most tuners place a wide-band up the rear of the exhaust to tune, but if we are running factory ECU (with Nistune) which uses the factory O2 sensor could this create lean/rich conditions?

So my thought was, to have the waste gate pipe plumbed back into the front pipe, and have the O2 sensor moved from the factory position (5-6 inches from the Turbo) to somewhere just before the cat.

My thoughts: it doesnt matter whether 20% or 50% of the air is unseen by the O2 sensor, the RATIO of the air to fuel (afr) remaibs the same of the escaped exhaust gas after it leaves the manifold, so regardless of the QUANTITY of gas goin thru the sensor its still measuring the correct afr.. Please correct me if weong?

02 feedback is only used on cruise when gate is shut.

Under load 02 is ignored

So its using AFM voltages yeah? Would explain alot then lol

My thoughts: it doesnt matter whether 20% or 50% of the air is unseen by the O2 sensor, the RATIO of the air to fuel (afr) remaibs the same of the escaped exhaust gas after it leaves the manifold, so regardless of the QUANTITY of gas goin thru the sensor its still measuring the correct afr.. Please correct me if weong?

This makes sense, but what if the waste gate wasn't mounted centrally (in my case) on the manifold and the cylinders closest ran leaner/richer then the rest. But I think above is on the mark.

My thoughts: it doesnt matter whether 20% or 50% of the air is unseen by the O2 sensor, the RATIO of the air to fuel (afr) remaibs the same of the escaped exhaust gas after it leaves the manifold, so regardless of the QUANTITY of gas goin thru the sensor its still measuring the correct afr.. Please correct me if weong?

You sir are correct. You get a gold star :)

Kane u seem to be getting confused.

The wastegate doesnt bypass unburnt fuel etc it just bypasses amount of exhaust gas.

Ron is 110% correct saying it doesnt matter how much exhaust gas is bypassed it still has the same exhaust gas crom te screamer as the tailpipe

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


  • Latest Posts

    • Coming home late at night and driving past the police is the only reason i need one haha And yeh, definitley needs a switch to quickly enable it, dont have time to be getting my phone, opening an app, waiting for it to update etc before being able to make the change
    • Because it is financially convenient for them lol. Why wouldn't they want to give you the lowest possible valuation for your car?
    • Yep. @Duncan also shannons they will rip you dry and will be probably limited on how much you can drive. Also keep in mind that you always have to have it garaged with Shannons, with enthusiasts as per their PDS you can have it 2 times per week on the driveway for example. 
    • I had a generic 4" Varex rear box on my old V8, worked a treat for sneaking home late at night, it was as quite as stock when closed The car was "fairly" loud when open as it consisted of 1" 7/8 headers to 3" catted Y pipe, to 4" single, it did have a resonator in the mid pipe and only the Varex out the back I also hard wired in a Varex dash mount switch, as the key fob thing is a pain to use when driving I wouldn't recommend giving the beans when it is closed though as it creates a large restriction in the exhaust  It also can in very handy when pulled over for "random" breath tests or just cruising past the constabulary   
    • Here is the before and after of the scraping/sanding of the IC pads on the tachometer board for the fix mentioned in this thread. And yes it worked fine after. Just a note if you change any components on the board the tach calibration can be wrong showing the wrong idle etc...only problem is once it is installed back in the cluster you can't get to it to adjust...ouch! My fix was to cut out the calibration pot (the blue one) from the board and run it with two wires to the fuse panel under the dash where I could adjust the idle calibration once everything was installed. And yes I soldered everything up again including the half soldered components either side of the IC in my photos                                
×
×
  • Create New...