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StuartM wrote:and when i say 'some error' dont knee-jerk and think your car wont start, you probably wont ever even notice.
matt dunn wrote:Why dont you give us a clue? Tell us what else effects timing that you put out by retarding the timing?
matt dunn wrote:Better to have the timing retarded by 2 degree's manually than the computer detecting knock and you loose 8 degree's.
StuartM wrote:matt: the fuel will be delivered at the wrong time by the amount you set it out by. but thats no biggie if its only 2deg out.
StuartM wrote:my point is that the ECU does NOT KNOW that the timing is out and therefore you can expect some error in the electronic spark advance. because the ESA is additive to the base timing, you modify the total advance (given). But exact timing of the spark in an ESA system is not soley additive to base timing; TPS, manifold pressure, measured airflow, coolant temperature among other things can effect the delivered ignition timing.
StuartM wrote:In the case of my sister's curren having the dizzy a few degrees out was enough to make it idle rough and lose power, this is because the spark was being output at what the computer thought to be exactly (for example) 12deg but it reality was less, ie the ESA was all to sh1t.
RomanV wrote: Mr Mainstream: The king of the Pushrods?!
RedMist wrote:Sorry but there was other mitigating factors in the fault with your sisters curren.
RedMist wrote:I've never seen a sequential injection standard ECU.
...A sequential system will have one injector per injector driver.
RedMist wrote:So I gather you are saying that the computer, now getting its signal a few degrees different from stock has another reference?
sergei wrote:BTW I can check if 20v is sequential, grouped, or simultanious (I'll come back to it later), but I'm more biased that 20v is sequential system, the clues are:
High impeadance injectors (relatively slow, inacurate on high rpm low load)
4 separate injector drives (why not make one common, it is cheaper anyway).
I have pdfs here stating that there are toyota ECU which run sequential injection. It states there that...A sequential system will have one injector per injector driver.
My check involves in hooking up 2 channel oscilloscope to each injector while car running and checking injector timing. But I need motivation to pull oscilloscope out (as it is a bench unit)...
StuartM wrote:
tell me what exactly was the problem with my sister's curren? and why do you have a hard time beliving me? oh, and why would these mitigating factors disappear when i set the timing correctly?
StuartM wrote:you havn't seen many modern ECUs, so what? I dont like your belligerant attitude. If you know what was wrong, please tell me, otherwise your just acting like a know-it-all.
StuartM wrote:no hard feelings mate, but im on this forum to learn, not argue.
StuartM wrote:RedMist wrote:So I gather you are saying that the computer, now getting its signal a few degrees different from stock has another reference?
yes, all measurments are relative and AFAIK the ESA is relative to the timing signal received by the distributor. When the base timing is adjusted the output of air temperature-based-retard and coolant-temp-based retard/advance will not be perfect, for example, in a turbocharged engine you may require less air temp-based retard because you retarded the base timing.
StuartM wrote:for a perfect spark advance curve to exist the value added by ESA would need to re-calibrated and i dont think modifying the spark table ROM would be very practical. for what its worth, on a 4A-GE ECU you will probably not notice much error with the timing changed, but bear in mind it wont be perfect.
RedMist wrote:As far as I know nobody has yet cracked the DENSO chipset.
sergei wrote:RedMist wrote:As far as I know nobody has yet cracked the DENSO chipset.
But you are wrong, as I own 2 cars with 2 ecus wich have been "cracked" (one by BLITZ another by Mine's)... It is again case of my lack of motivation to pull out the ROM chip and read what is on it and possibly reverse engineer it (well I'm not really capable to do it right now).
All right, I will pull out osciloscope on saturday (if it is going to be sunny day), and keep you updated...
sergei wrote:well, they are in fact replacement chipsets, but obviosuly adapted to work with DENSO board, I always believed that DENSO chipset is just modified intel (8051) ....
As for the link plus, after 5k it is pointless to have sequential, as injector duty cylce will be way longer than valve opening time.
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