y5mgisi
1 ton status
So if my calculations are correct, i have taken away approx 40% of fuel at idle. Does that sound normal?
I had the same thing with my 350HO. With Fast's advice, I enabled open loop idle and set the AFR at 13.5 and it idles the the L05 did. I know it burns more fuel, but it idles so well that I don't want to go back to closed loop idle. Same here man,BLM/INT was 128 at idle but it shaked, even at 800 rpm for me. Now it's like butta at 650 rpm.
Before OL idle, I changed everything from injector terms to SA to prop gains, etc and nothing worked. Idle SA for me with the open loop idle is about 28 deg. Try it out!
Mike

That is exactly what I had to do with that BB Mopar cammed engine... good advice! I'm not sure you need it yet and if you still have a cat it will not like it at all!Info formyeslf to take into consideration later,
I had the same thing with my 350HO. With Fast's advice, I enabled open loop idle and set the AFR at 13.5 and it idles the the L05 did. I know it burns more fuel, but it idles so well that I don't want to go back to closed loop idle. Same here man,BLM/INT was 128 at idle but it shaked, even at 800 rpm for me. Now it's like butta at 650 rpm.
Before OL idle, I changed everything from injector terms to SA to prop gains, etc and nothing worked. Idle SA for me with the open loop idle is about 28 deg. Try it out!
Mike
From here,
http://www.thirdgen.org/techboard/diy-prom/421143-pointers-help-me-get.html
A typical TBI system will idle with an IAC count of 35 to 45. On a cam'd
engine, zero steps may be better. Myself, I shoot for three to five steps
with a warm engine, and no A/C. The reason for this has to do with the
injectors residing above the throttle plates.
During idle, the TBI injectors are designed to spray onto the bore walls.
When this happens, the fuel runs down the walls, and past the throttle
blades. The air speed past the throttle blades is very high. This action
shears the fuel into vapor that is then able to travel to the chambers.
If the engine idles with a high IAC count, this IAC air is bypassing
the throttle blades, hindering the flow of fuel into the plenum. By
opening the throttle blades and reducing the IAC counts, there is a
greater volume of air drawing fuel past the throttle blades.
Next time you are timing the engine, shine that light into the TBI
bores, and look. Then, knock out that throttle blade adjustment plug, and
turn it in. Just keep an eye on the IAC count, you do not want to try
to get it below zero. This is the reason I set the idle to have at least
a couple of counts.
0x5C7: Time delay for small error IAC retract. (desired idle too low)
0x5C8: Time delay for large error IAC retract. (desired idle too low)
0x5C9: Time delay for small error IAC extend. (desired idle too high)
0x5CA: Time delay for large error IAC extend. (desired idle too high)
The past four entries are used to slow-down, or delay, the operation
of the IAC at idle. When in closed loop idle, the IAC attempts to
maintain the desired idle. The error term is the difference between
the desired idle rpm and the current engine rpm.
A larger error term has a shorter delay, to move the IAC quicker. Once
the idle is close, the delay is longer. This is done for better control
of the idle speed.
If the engine idle oscillates wildly, seems like the IAC can not
'keep-up', increasing these values (slightly), may correct it. Note
that an oscillating idle can also be caused by incorrect VE% and SA
tables.
An oscillating idle can be caused by:
Incorrect VE% table (flatten idle area).
Incorrect SA table (flatten idle area).
Too fast IAC reaction, increase (slightly) the delay values
at 0x5D7 through 0x5DA.
Stall saver set too high (it's kicking in).
Battery voltage varying.
No need to do it again because of a ECM or chip change. Those are mechanical adjustments.About the minimum air thing, i have done it before. Several times in fact! But, with my old computer. Do i need to do it again with this one? And yes i do have a cat, but its just one of the cheap magnaflow hi flow units.
Screenshot of final adjustments. BPW is still stock at 135.
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I think your learning curve is less steep now that you can see how the chip changes are changing the data logs.
I have been nervous so far about messing with the BPW. The ve table i can wrap my mind around with a visual, the BPW is still somewhat "mysterious" to me. I do plan on it in the end im affraid. The funny thing about all this, is that i really dont plan on having this thing hit the road for at least another year! So until then, i just want the dang thing idle right so when i move it to mow the lawn im not instantly annoyed! Also, this way, when i do get it on the road, i will have gotten the "hard part" out of the way. I really wish i was willing to spend the money on some time of emulator gizmo that would allow on the fly adjustments! That would be super awesome! It has already started getting old having to pull the chip every time i want to adjust even the slightest thing. Im still kinda considering playing the the afr cause i dont really need my cat. If it does get toasted its not big loss. Seems like alot of people over on TGO(ive obviously been spending tons of time over there) have had a situation like mine where the blms are right at 128 or very close to it but it still runs "rough". Of those people, some have had success playing with things like idle deadband, o2 threasholds, and afr's. Just not really sure what else to do to get rid of that roughness. Or my part throttle "surge" where i can sit in the driveway, bring the rpms up, and have them go WWWWWWWwwwwwwwWWWWWWWwwwwwwwwWWWWWWWWWwwwwwwwwwWWWWWWWwwwwwwwWWWWWWW
Anyway, we'll see.
I also think having high VE table numbers is not good.
Ideally, the VE numbers will gradually increase as engine load is increased and engine RPM will increase. Surging can be caused by having a few neighboring VE cells having large increases in values, and not gradually increasing as engine load increases and engine RPM increases.
No matter who you talk to about tuning a chip, absolutely no one has ever posted a good reason NOT have the VE numbers between 45~95