MAGN1T wrote:sergei wrote:
I can say, yes. I had SAFC on mine and only thing it did is make it worse.
I also noticed by monitoring VF it happily reverted itself to factory after a while, if Oxygen sensor is functioning. Or if you do change certain things over certain threshold it would run in semi-limp mode (VF=0V), which equals too rich and no advance. The oxygen sensor affects the full throttle operation, even if it is open loop mode, in long term. When ECU is reset it will start rapidly learning from O2 sensor what fuel trim it supposed to run, and it set long term fuel trim. Also it constantly adjust long term fuel trim to compensate for sensor calibration. Thus adjusting the spring on AFM (or intercepting the signal) will only affect the transients on long term while base line will stay more or less the same.
So your oxy sensor was faulty and the correct fix would have been to replace it?
Steve
Why do you think it was faulty?
The first thing what happens to VF when Ox. is faulty is that it stays 0 all the time. If it is at 2.5V,then everything is fine. If it is any other voltage (at 2000rpm) then there is something wrong (eg: AFM bypass).
It is easy to tell if it is faulty or not, warmup the car and measure Ox. output in the diagnostics tab, it should fluctuate between 0v and ~0.9V (voltage is not that important as long as it is higher than 0.5V or whatever is threshold in ECU). The frequency of fluctuations would should be about 8 times in 10 seconds. Each fluctuation is when ECU adjust the mixture. The Ox. sensor has got really steep hysteresis so it no use to measure voltage directly (it basically has no linear region) so what ECU does is guesses the fine tune (can't remember exactly but it will be just a small amount of injector duty cycle adjustments) so what it does is trying to keep the mixture at exact Ox. sensor switch over point (just like balancing a pole). If anyone done AI at uni, that algorithm should fall into fuzzy logic section.