teaser post:
turns out i never disabled single-fire fueling, however, it seems it VERY rarely is enabled anyway(only when the BPW is around 1mSec or less in stock cals)... what i actually ended up doing was disabling the ability for the factory alpha-n stuff to be used at all. that alone has helped immensely. interesting fact: it actually takes a lot longer to calculate the factory alpha-n code compared to the speed-density code...
it seems GM normally refers to single-fire in it's documents as "quasi-synchronus" fueling. however, in the A1 call listing, the "injector constant for single-fire" is actually the injector constant for just alpha-n, that threw me off for a while... but now i've done a few changes to the code and removed the MPH requirement for single-fire and upped the maximum BPW to allow single-fire, now around 8mS, i'm going to see how well the engine reacts, and if necessary, i'll have single-fire disabled whenever a large enough change in TPS is registered, so a temporary double-fire event will happen in that situation...
this change should roughly double the size of injectors you can use without sacrificing idle quality or low-throttle/high RPM issues.... interestingly enough, a side effect of this is that by using larger injectors, less injector on-time is required to flow the same amount of fuel, which will increase the range where single-fire will be in effect... neat.
stay tuned.
turns out i never disabled single-fire fueling, however, it seems it VERY rarely is enabled anyway(only when the BPW is around 1mSec or less in stock cals)... what i actually ended up doing was disabling the ability for the factory alpha-n stuff to be used at all. that alone has helped immensely. interesting fact: it actually takes a lot longer to calculate the factory alpha-n code compared to the speed-density code...
it seems GM normally refers to single-fire in it's documents as "quasi-synchronus" fueling. however, in the A1 call listing, the "injector constant for single-fire" is actually the injector constant for just alpha-n, that threw me off for a while... but now i've done a few changes to the code and removed the MPH requirement for single-fire and upped the maximum BPW to allow single-fire, now around 8mS, i'm going to see how well the engine reacts, and if necessary, i'll have single-fire disabled whenever a large enough change in TPS is registered, so a temporary double-fire event will happen in that situation...
this change should roughly double the size of injectors you can use without sacrificing idle quality or low-throttle/high RPM issues.... interestingly enough, a side effect of this is that by using larger injectors, less injector on-time is required to flow the same amount of fuel, which will increase the range where single-fire will be in effect... neat.
stay tuned.
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