Author Topic: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices  (Read 13613 times)

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My427stang

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #30 on: June 29, 2017, 07:04:55 PM »
Jay, I know you aren't argumentative, you never are, in fact I continue to hope that you know it's the same for me.  I love to think about how things work as much as you, so it makes me think harder, but the rocker ratio thing I really think we need to kill first

First advertised duration on all the cams I buy or have ground is based on lobe lift, not sure if the SOHC is different, I am always open minded and I hate absolutes, but I have not seen an advertised duration on any cam take lash into consideration or be measured at the valve, its a hard measurement from .006, .020, or .050 tappet lift in everything I have seen. 

With your cam, and knowing you are smarter than the average bear and pick your own stuff, I suppose it very well could be, but typically advertised for a hyd cam is rated at .006 lobe (tappet) lift and solids are at .020 lobe lift.  With a 1.76 rocker and .024 for lash, not accounting for loss, advertised actually would relate closer to .011 valve lift, and tighter the lash, the closer a solid looks a lot like a hyd .006 rating when measured at the valve.

Assuming the SOHC is the same, and runs a 1.3 or so rocker ratio, .020 tappet lift is .026 at the valve, and when you subtract lash it's closer to zero at the valve.  So rocker ratio, unless somehow you have purposely ground it different, does matter for effective duration at the valve. 

If you don't believe me, measure a 1.5 rocker in a wedge and then a 1.73 for degrees of crank rotation from .006 to .006 at the valve.  The 1.73 rocker will start earlier and end later at the valve, (just like a bigger cam) that will change both DCR (by changing exhaust valve closing point, and also effective overlap at the valve because EVC is later and IVC is slightly sooner.  It doesn't change the lobe, but it changes what the engine sees in operation which accomplishes the same thing. 

This is one reason why lash adjustment is a tuning tool, the .002 or .005 is miniscule in lift, but by opening the valve sooner on the ramp and closing it later, you increase duration and increase overlap when measured at the valve.

As far as concrete evidence on system responsiveness, I cannot give you calculation time or measured response off the top of my head any more than I can determine which processor is faster, a FAST system or a CBAZA Ford with a QH rider chip, but here are a few calculations that I can control, not limited to these three, just a few I pulled off Binary Editor related to closed loop HEGO and fuel control, some examples:

1 - HEGO bias - My system allows me to tune and then adaptively control the weight of O2 sensor input based on differences from mixture on that bank.  I can build fuel tables, injector slope, timing and duration, and either let it run and adjust to the full range of control or limit it to adjust bias from that table to tune each bank.  That bias can be tracked and see how it changes.  From the definition: HEGO bias - used in open loop as a fixed value and a scalar in closed loop. These learning correction values are used in closed loop as a function of engine RPM and torque to manage power rate output and final a/f

2 - Fuel scaling for load - closed loop only - these values will adjust based on calculated load adjusts HEGO exhaust pulse delay, provides input to HEGO bias and amplitude to account for abnormally high or load loads as calculated by air/sea load inferred by BAP live calculation

 3 - MinADP - Sets fuel adaptive learn minimum, requires active HEGO as controlled by affected multipliers in open loop or scalars in closed loop

I couldn't cut and paste and had to retype all of this so i just posted a  few to show you what it was looking at but it does adjust and allows what it sees to tailor fuel based on load.  It is very similar when it tweaks spark and injector timing based on all sensor input.  The question is, is the word responsive incorrect? you make that call, but the more variables that can be compensated for real time, the more responsive I call the system.  Responsive to variables, i.e "pays attention to more stuff and acts on it"

Keep in mind, OEM Ford has not used a Speed Density system since the mid 90s in pickups, and even then, those ran in closed loop.  That is not a 900 hp race car of course, but even in those 200 hp 302s, an EFI based on tables could not maintain an a/f mixture that met emissions standards in later years.  Now you are not doing this for emissions, but it took WBO2 sensors and closed loop for Detroit to make significant things happen under the hood of new cars.  I would think that Ford would not have went to such lengths if it just took a good tuner to build tables

What I will try to do is see if I can figure out exactly what changes based on O2 sensor output, the reason I say try is guys spend years inside these OEM computers and continue to find more.  When i get a solid list of O2 sensor controlled adaptive learning variables, I will build a log to track how much they change, and we can see changes based on O2 sensor and how often it happens on a long ride or some throttle horsing.  To be honest I have never had to log that kind of detail, but logging based on parameters like the bins above should show what it is doing and what is driving whatever it does


« Last Edit: June 29, 2017, 07:13:09 PM by My427stang »
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Ross
Bullock's Power Service, LLC
- 70 Fastback Mustang, 489 cid FE, Victor, SEFI, Erson SFT cam, TKO-600 5 speed, 4.11 9 inch.
- 71 F100 shortbed 4x4, 461 cid FE, headers, Victor Pro-flo EFI, Comp Custom HFT cam, 3.50 9 inch

jayb

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #31 on: June 29, 2017, 08:54:34 PM »
On the SOHC, all I can say is that when I set the lash at 0.020" and measure the seat to seat duration, I get exactly what's on the cam card.  So, I'm sticking to my guns on that one.

And I still don't see how you can say that closed loop is more responsive than open loop.  You are talking in some cases about have two O2 sensors, and making bank to bank variations.  I've tuned with eight O2 sensors, one in each header primary, and used eight different trim maps in the EFI software to adjust the values in the main fuel table.  And of course when you have MAP, you have engine load, and that is also tunable with an open loop system.

I guess we will have to agree to disagree  ;)
Jay Brown
- 1969 Mach 1, Drag Week 2005 Winner NA/BB, 511" FE (10.60s @ 129); Drag Week 2007 Runner-Up PA/BB, 490" Supercharged FE (9.35 @ 151)
- 1964 Ford Galaxie, Drag Week 2009 Winner Modified NA (9.50s @ 143), 585" SOHC
- 1969 Shelby Clone, Drag Week 2015 Winner Modified NA (Average 8.98 @ 149), 585" SOHC

   

chris401

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #32 on: June 29, 2017, 11:34:57 PM »
Understanding how it works in the automotive field in OEM settings but not having a clue about the aftermarket I was thinking starting 12:1 afr, tuning the rest and then trimming fuel as needed. Is it that simple?

For my use I would run a closed loop. 5v reference 12v heater? Do you have to use dedicated O2 sensor with the system or can you solder in any sensor you want?

Jay,
When I think of an open loop and a barometer I think of multi port injection. I believe Ross is talking about climatic changes and how quickly the closed loop system with a MAS adapts.  For what your doing with an open loop it sounds like the technology has improved from what I am familiar with. Do the open loop systems respond to temperature and humidity as well? I am guessing there is an air charge temperature sensor in there somewhere?

Been thinking about it but not convinced in all the car show hype. Would like to know it runs in the FE community.
Thanks

My427stang

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #33 on: June 30, 2017, 06:30:12 AM »
I guess we will have to agree to disagree  ;)

Fair enough on the EFI LOL

As far as the cam...I am not sure why you are getting the same seat to seat as lobe lift unless the design/geometry of your rockers are losing lift somewhere or you measure lash on the cam of the rocker on a SOHC

You should be gaining duration at the valve, it's a simple lever.  I'd be interested in what you see if you put your cam in v blocks or chucked it up in a lathe to see if it was 286 @ .050.  If it is, then either an OHC cam is measured differently or you have 1:1 rockers (unlikely)

Regardless, your shit runs and stays running, my shit runs and stays running, and neither of us are burning pistons. 8) 8) 8)

One last comment, in years of OEM stuff fixing cars, trucks etc since the 80s, and quite a few cheapo and expensive EFI conversions I have replaced ZERO O2 sensors due to electronic issues.  Physical damage yes, but true failures, none. 

Does your system shut power off to the O2 sensor when it is in open loop?  The only failures I have heard about are damage due to fouling or saturation when the heated part of the "HEGO" is shut down and the sensor cannot stay clean. 

The other potential option is that you have it sitting in the exhaust flame  at WOT and it is overheating, I don't have that issue with mine, but the option there is to move it back further, usually requiring a longer collector pipe if you run open headers, which for you may not be what you want to do either

To the crowd, Jay and I aren't agreeing on some details, but in no way am I saying the modern aftermarket tunable systems are not good, I am also not saying he is wrong, or you need a MAF/dedicated closed loop tune all the time. (Although he may be saying I am wrong LOL)

His stuff works the way it is designed, for those people who are considering EFI, realize how deep we can get into adjusting and tuning with either of our systems and how different each are, those techniques are why we don't agree on the small stuff in this post

We both said the exact same thing on two points:

1 - Adjustable systems can be manipulated to do just about everything on any combo
2 - The hand held controller stuff are not that adjustable. 

However if you are not far from normal, I am not sure the TB systems NEED to be as adjustable, but I sure wish there were, because it would be pretty slick


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Ross
Bullock's Power Service, LLC
- 70 Fastback Mustang, 489 cid FE, Victor, SEFI, Erson SFT cam, TKO-600 5 speed, 4.11 9 inch.
- 71 F100 shortbed 4x4, 461 cid FE, headers, Victor Pro-flo EFI, Comp Custom HFT cam, 3.50 9 inch

blykins

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #34 on: June 30, 2017, 08:06:55 AM »
I don't have much input on the EFI stuff, but I will say that camshaft duration is measured at the lobe.   It has to be that way, or else you would be chasing yourself around in circles while degreeing a camshaft, using checking springs, actual valve springs, different rocker arm ratios, etc.   It should be assumed that you first check the camshaft lobe geometry against the cam card to make sure it's right, then you spend the rest of your time minimizing losses in valve motion.

I would also assume that it's the same for a SOHC engine.  How would you ever know if the camshaft lobe was ground correctly if your rocker arm ratio was off?
Brent Lykins
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jayb

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #35 on: June 30, 2017, 09:23:20 AM »
You guys are right about cam duration being measured at the lobe, but perhaps they spec the SOHC duration differently.  Rocker ratio on the SOHC varies somewhat due to geometry but it is around 1.3:1.  Back to the original point, 87 degrees is the seat to seat overlap on that cam, for sure.

On the wideband O2 sensors they are sensitive to race fuel, and I have heard estimates that they will go bad as soon as 50 hours of continuous exposure to race fuel.  But I've replaced a lot of them far sooner than that.  I always power up the O2 sensors when the ignition is on because I log the data.  You can damage an O2 sensor by running it in the exhaust without powering the heater circuit in the sensor, so on my dyno and in the cars they are turned on with ignition.  Usually I put them in the collector, just after the merge in a merge collector setup, or somewhere in the middle if its not a merge collector.  I do have bungs in the primaries on my race car, just so I can do the eight O2 sensor tuning on the dyno, but haven't used them much that way, just for a few dyno pulls.

Ross, how do you know your O2 sensors are still good?  What is your reference?  On the dyno, I have an O2 sensor on each side, plus the fuel and air turbines that monitor the fuel the engine is using and the air the engine is using, to give a direct A/F readout from those measurements.  So, I have three A/F measurements going at once.  When everything is working right, all three are in good agreement.  Right at the moment I've got one Bosch O2 sensor that is going bad.  It used to read the same as the other one, and the dyno A/F number, but now it is reading about a point rich.  I've done all kinds of tests in the past to sort this out, for example swapping the sensors from side to side when there's a discrepancy.  The outlying data always follows the sensor.  It may still look like its working, but its no longer accurate.  It calibrates fine in free air, but the data is off when compared to other standards.  I would suggest that you may have had bad O2 sensors in the past, but not known it because you don't have a good reference.  As I mentioned earlier, lack of confidence in a good, consistent wideband O2 sensor over time is a major reason why I prefer to run open loop.

Just my opinions of course, and I agree with Marc that this is a valuable discussion...
Jay Brown
- 1969 Mach 1, Drag Week 2005 Winner NA/BB, 511" FE (10.60s @ 129); Drag Week 2007 Runner-Up PA/BB, 490" Supercharged FE (9.35 @ 151)
- 1964 Ford Galaxie, Drag Week 2009 Winner Modified NA (9.50s @ 143), 585" SOHC
- 1969 Shelby Clone, Drag Week 2015 Winner Modified NA (Average 8.98 @ 149), 585" SOHC

   

turbohunter

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #36 on: June 30, 2017, 09:55:31 AM »
Jay, what is the marker that tells you an O2 sensor is going bad initially.
Marc
'61 F100 292Y
'66 Mustang Injected 428
'66 Q code Country Squire wagon


My427stang

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #37 on: June 30, 2017, 12:32:05 PM »
Ross, how do you know your O2 sensors are still good?  What is your reference?  On the dyno, I have an O2 sensor on each side, plus the fuel and air turbines that monitor the fuel the engine is using and the air the engine is using, to give a direct A/F readout from those measurements.  So, I have three A/F measurements going at once.  When everything is working right, all three are in good agreement.  Right at the moment I've got one Bosch O2 sensor that is going bad.  It used to read the same as the other one, and the dyno A/F number, but now it is reading about a point rich.  I've done all kinds of tests in the past to sort this out, for example swapping the sensors from side to side when there's a discrepancy.  The outlying data always follows the sensor.  It may still look like its working, but its no longer accurate.  It calibrates fine in free air, but the data is off when compared to other standards.  I would suggest that you may have had bad O2 sensors in the past, but not known it because you don't have a good reference.  As I mentioned earlier, lack of confidence in a good, consistent wideband O2 sensor over time is a major reason why I prefer to run open loop.

Just my opinions of course, and I agree with Marc that this is a valuable discussion...

I have 2 narrowband and one wideband and the system has calibration tests I can do on the NB as well as being able to see the bank reference.  I have no reason to ever look at logs for a bad one if I don't see a check engine light or code, but I do periodically run my self tests when I am bored, easy to do with a scanner on the OEM NB sensors.  As far as the WB, I just haven't seen them log anything funky

I'd also ask, how often do you change them in your truck or wife's car?  I can't compare the performance you are asking your race car to parallel mama's grocery getter, or vice versa, but I just don't see O2 sensors fail in OEM either.

I do not run race gas though, I in fact, I run pump 89-91 most of the time with no knock sensor (hard to get to work properly with a noisy solid lifter motor)  Mine is of course only 10.7:1 and a 286/294 @ .020 lobe, I run lashed at .014 instead of manufacturers spec of .028

On edit - Something that just occurred to me, do you have a stable reference voltage, good grounds and clean power?  One thing I have done on most EFI installs is replace electromechanical voltage regulators, ensure there are very stable grounds and overall very careful with wiring.  Dirty power and EMI can be real funky, maybe the dyno has something happening there?
« Last Edit: June 30, 2017, 12:39:12 PM by My427stang »
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Ross
Bullock's Power Service, LLC
- 70 Fastback Mustang, 489 cid FE, Victor, SEFI, Erson SFT cam, TKO-600 5 speed, 4.11 9 inch.
- 71 F100 shortbed 4x4, 461 cid FE, headers, Victor Pro-flo EFI, Comp Custom HFT cam, 3.50 9 inch

cjshaker

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #38 on: June 30, 2017, 01:55:48 PM »
I'd also ask, how often do you change them in your truck or wife's car?  I can't compare the performance you are asking your race car to parallel mama's grocery getter, or vice versa, but I just don't see O2 sensors fail in OEM either.

I do, but then I work on this stuff for a living. I've replaced 3 in the last year alone, among the 32 FI vehicles that I take care of.
Doug Smith


'69 R-code Mach 1, 427 MR, 2x4, Jerico, 4.30 Locker
'70 F-350 390
'55 Ford Customline 2dr
'37 Ford Coupe

chris401

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #39 on: June 30, 2017, 04:04:01 PM »
You can check for a bad O2 by putting a little water in the air intake. 1v means it is able to go to it's max range but I do not know if that would work in a race gas senerio. If it has lead like aircraft fuel it would build up on the sensor and not make it read right.

jayb

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #40 on: June 30, 2017, 07:24:32 PM »
Jay, what is the marker that tells you an O2 sensor is going bad initially.
That's the problem, Marc, there really isn't one.  Unless you have two, and one starts to drift with respect to the other.

Ross, I am a fanatic about clean power, because I had that problem with my first EFI system.  Big caps on the power supplies, heavy gauge wire, etc.
Jay Brown
- 1969 Mach 1, Drag Week 2005 Winner NA/BB, 511" FE (10.60s @ 129); Drag Week 2007 Runner-Up PA/BB, 490" Supercharged FE (9.35 @ 151)
- 1964 Ford Galaxie, Drag Week 2009 Winner Modified NA (9.50s @ 143), 585" SOHC
- 1969 Shelby Clone, Drag Week 2015 Winner Modified NA (Average 8.98 @ 149), 585" SOHC

   

chris401

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #41 on: June 30, 2017, 08:01:18 PM »
Jay, what is the marker that tells you an O2 sensor is going bad initially.
That's the problem, Marc, there really isn't one.  Unless you have two, and one starts to drift with respect to the other.
Funny you posted that under open ended the answer.

jayb

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #42 on: June 30, 2017, 09:39:12 PM »
Chris, per your previous question all the systems I'm familiar with are capable of running in closed loop.  But once they are tuned, you can run them open loop without any trouble, and avoid any questions re the O2 sensor.  They all have compensation for air and water temp, altitude via the MAP sensor, etc., whether running in closed loop with the O2 sensor, or open loop where the O2 sensor does not provide A/F feedback to the system.
Jay Brown
- 1969 Mach 1, Drag Week 2005 Winner NA/BB, 511" FE (10.60s @ 129); Drag Week 2007 Runner-Up PA/BB, 490" Supercharged FE (9.35 @ 151)
- 1964 Ford Galaxie, Drag Week 2009 Winner Modified NA (9.50s @ 143), 585" SOHC
- 1969 Shelby Clone, Drag Week 2015 Winner Modified NA (Average 8.98 @ 149), 585" SOHC

   

My427stang

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #43 on: July 01, 2017, 08:03:33 AM »
Chris, per your previous question all the systems I'm familiar with are capable of running in closed loop.  But once they are tuned, you can run them open loop without any trouble, and avoid any questions re the O2 sensor.  They all have compensation for air and water temp, altitude via the MAP sensor, etc., whether running in closed loop with the O2 sensor, or open loop where the O2 sensor does not provide A/F feedback to the system.

Jay, I know yours has a great ability to respond to conditions, and how much a system needs to compensate depends on the varying environmental conditions and range of use, but a couple points.  This one is long, and generally I don't hang onto anything, but I just feel that there is more to be said about the EFI.

First one is goofy and I am not part of the word police, but just HAVE to say it as a career aviator...your MAP adjusts for elevation by allowing inputs to calculate air mass.  You are fast, but altitude is where your ALL wheels don't touch, I am very impressed with you hanging the hoops, but it's not altitude LOL That being said, all over the net they say MAPs adjust for altitude, but until you call "gear up" it's elevation :)

Seriously though a MAP measures manifold pressure, and also true, a MAP and BAP are often the same sensor, one with a vacuum source, one sensing atmospheric pressure, but they are quite a bit different in the gonkulation.  A MAP, usually combined with an air charge temp sensor (ACT) is used as an input to calculate air mass that is going into the engine in lieu of a combination of measuring it with a MAF (Mass Airflow meter) and a BAP (barometric sensor).  You know how yours works, as you said it in your last post

Now, knowing that cylinder fill is a function of relative pressure of an evacuated cylinder, those forces acting upon emptying it more, and those restricting filling it, versus atmospheric pressure trying to push it in, a MAP does technically account for it mathematically and it is pretty good at sensing engine load differences, but the function is very different than a BAP, and honestly I do not think either MAP or BAP sensors measure very precisely. 

Again, how precise is needed? It depends, however, OEM applications do not use MAPs and Speed Density calculations anymore (that I know of), they use MAF and BAP or MAP because they give more exquisite data than the one sensor alone.  One reason is the sensors are dedicated to measure one thing (although a lot of new MAFs also measure air temp too, older ones like mine use a separate air charge temp sensor), another reason that EOM shifted from MAP in many applications, is that MAPs are fed by a relatively violent source (think Kaase's clear intake manifold test).

Now, that doesn't mean MAPs are bad or obsolete, they are still used with MAF, the line to the BAP will of course dampen the signal and the BAP itself has some mechanical damping and the ECM has smoothing in the program, but it is by no means a precise sensor IMHO.  One thing the MAP does do better than a BAP is measure actually changes in load though, especially when compared against the TPS data with changes in throttle, however, it is used with the temp sensors to calculate changes in air mass where a MAF measures changes in airflow and compares to air temp and baro to come up with the data.

I have seen guys add a BAP to a SD system, so it measures baro and still uses intake pressure from the MAP to have a more precise air density calculation, but I would be surprised if it changes in use much other than adding difficulty to the programming and tuning.  It's an attempt to be more reactive though when calculating adjustments.

You and I may never agree, but looking at our complete systems:

My MAF, BAP, and ACT measure all the characteristics of the air coming in, the ECT adds engine temp info, the TPS translates what the guy behind the wheel is doing, then O2 senses what is coming out.  All of those provide near-real-time info to adjust well calibrated tables and adjust them within the limits the guy tuning it (or the ECM) allows. 

In a SD system like yours, you have a MAP and ACT that provide input to calculate air density, the ECT provides engine temp, and the TPS translates what the guy behind the wheel is doing, all of that is compared to well calibrated and well thought out tables (as you pointed out) but in open loop, you only adjust for changes in inputs, you don't measure output when you exclude the O2 sensor info.  To me, that is cheating the decision maker by not providing the whole story (stay with me though, because I actually think for you, it is a smart choice)

I cannot explain your O2 sensor calibration changes and failures, FYI, Brent says he sees some similar things on the dyno, and I cannot say for your application and your environment that your system does not compensate enough, because it clearly DOES for you and many other guys.   You are essentially taking a very precise program and still allowing it to compensate it for many things that a carburetor would have to use physical airflow and fluid/aerosol management (bleeds, boosters, orifice sizes, throttle blades, venturi designs etc) to manage. Your stuff is WAY more adjustable than that, likely significantly more responsive to environmental changes than a carb, and way cool as you know

However, measuring both sides of a process and providing information by design allows more information, and if the sensors on both sides of the process measure more and rely on less calculation, there are less chances for errors.  That is true in any human or non-human decision making process, including the ones you ask an ECM to make

It comes down to is where I started, I am not saying open loop is wrong, as a metaphor...how much information do you need to order a pizza vs a big investment decision?

Although there is no way I can ever agree that an EFI without an output loop has as much data and therefore as much ability to respond as one with one, I am not asking or recommending you change yours, because it clearly is responsive enough for your conditions.  How do we know?  You are measuring output using your eyeballs on plugs, your O2 sensor during testing and are not burning up pistons. 

Additionally, another reason I wouldn't recommend you go closed loop at WOT (even with a very narrow learning factor) is because your environmental conditions change less than the risk you are seeing with a bad O2 sensor.  If the O2 sensor fails at WOT you could hurt your car, if it fails cruising around town at drag week, probably not, but my position is, in my tuning, I go open loop at WOT in many tunes, just not in all conditions 

Therefore I cannot argue with your technique, I think it is SMART.  However, I just have to stand by my guns that you have chosen to limit the information to your ECM (for good reason) and therefore our academic discussion about ability to respond I still hold my position.  You have good reason, but you took an output sensor out of the loop.

Similarly, I think that the setup I have, for the use of my car and a bunch of street cars out there, is clearly proven by my experiences and the way modern cars have evolved for precise emissions (read: a/f and timing) control, but again, we use our vehicles very differently and I do not think that the wide range of fuels, elevation, driving conditions, part throttle load, etc, that open loop would provide an ECM used like mine enough data.

One last comment to everyone, Speed Density systems have come a VERY long way, and I think the modern versions like Jay uses, as opposed to 90's OEM, are very good for street use, and I am very happy with the TB systems I have installed using Speed Density (aside from a lack of good interface on most)  In fact, SD solves some packaging issues that MAF systems have, and MAF systems are very tough to build, but I generally tune both MAF and SD systems for closed loop where I can, and open loop only when the engine or risk won't let me ( so far...only idle with too much cam/not enough vacuum or WOT). 

Again, there is a gradient on how adjustable and then how responsive a system needs to be, and it is a combination of risk/reward and environmental conditions that determine that.  Like I said, I do not need a financial prospectus to order a pizza, or even to go out for a night on the town, but as the environment gets more complicated, mo' info is mo' better to be able to respond to varying environmental, load, and fuel changes IMHO and I want that O2 sensor to provide that data at the times I want it to
 
« Last Edit: July 01, 2017, 08:13:03 AM by My427stang »
---------------------------------
Ross
Bullock's Power Service, LLC
- 70 Fastback Mustang, 489 cid FE, Victor, SEFI, Erson SFT cam, TKO-600 5 speed, 4.11 9 inch.
- 71 F100 shortbed 4x4, 461 cid FE, headers, Victor Pro-flo EFI, Comp Custom HFT cam, 3.50 9 inch

chris401

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Re: EFI vs Carb/ engine build choices
« Reply #44 on: July 01, 2017, 08:05:59 AM »
Chris, per your previous question all the systems I'm familiar with are capable of running in closed loop.  But once they are tuned, you can run them open loop without any trouble, and avoid any questions re the O2 sensor.  They all have compensation for air and water temp, altitude via the MAP sensor, etc., whether running in closed loop with the O2 sensor, or open loop where the O2 sensor does not provide A/F feedback to the system.
I see, when you go open loop it is basically like a limp mode but instead with your preset fuel timing and trims.

The last comment was referring to testing a bad O2 by slowly introducing some water in the intake. This should work on any with any EFI system:

At 2000 rpm adding water increase will show a steady voltage increase on the O2 until it reaches 1v. A flat spot, no change or inability to max out means a bad sensor. Anything I am familiar with has a long term fuel trim that is too slow to lean out the engine to a dangerous low.