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To tune or not to tune, that is the question

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  • To tune or not to tune, that is the question



    Several things become evident based on this chart. First, my suspicions are confirmed, in that the transmission is not transmitting all the power, and that I am running on Cavalier code, not Celebrity. There's also the little matter of the pig rich mixture. The guy even said that at 4500 and above I basically pegged their sensor at 10:1, which means it went even richer than that.

    They offered to tune it for $425. Should I take them up on it?
    Kaiser George IX: 1996 Buick Century Special wagon. 213-SFI. 250k miles. Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down. First documented LX9 swap in an A-body! Click here to read my build thread!

  • #2
    $425! hell no. You could at least try one of my chips setup for your 3.1 first. Much cheaper and has a 30 day money back guarantee. Otherwise get the programmer setup and tune it yourself for much less. Fixing that rich condition shouldn't be hard.
    Ben
    60DegreeV6.com
    WOT-Tech.com

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    • #3
      What I don't get is if you have the ECM and prom that went with the Cavalier engine why would the fuel curve be that messed up and run that rich? It would seem at 10:1 AFR you'd be blowing black smoke and overheating the Cat. I'm no tuner and I don't mean to cast aspersion on this dyno run but I've heard operators can and do skew the results. I could be wrong but I just don't see how a factory engine with matching prom and ECM could run that overly rich unless the injectors were changed or something. and that doesn't explain why it's running lean below 3500 rpm at WOT, open loop.

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      • #4
        Stock $A1 code runs pretty rich at WOT, Ben's chip should fix that.

        Just to confirm, you are running stock injectors right?
        Past Builds;
        1991 Z24, 3500/5 Spd. 275WHP/259WTQ 13.07@108 MPH
        1989 Camaro RS, ITB-3500/700R4. 263WHP/263WTQ 13.52@99.2 MPH
        Current Project;
        1972 Nova 12.73@105.7 MPH

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        • #5
          ECM is original to the Celebrity, prom came from the Cavalier. Could that be causing the problem?

          Injectors were ordered for the Cavalier, but the part numbers were the same for both '92 Cav 3.1 and '89 Celebrity 2.8, and have the same flow rate of 15 pounds.

          I don't know how the results could have been skewed. I watched the entire process, and saw nothing amiss. AFR was measured from exhaust gas out the tailpipe, basically like an emissions sniffer test. Only thing I didn't like is that they ran the first pull in second, then balked when I asked to run it in third, saying they didn't think my brand new, T-rated tires could withstand the potential speed.

          Tangentially, the car pretended to do 125 on that pull.

          What does Ben's chip change?
          Last edited by LeftVentricle; 02-21-2009, 12:14 AM.
          Kaiser George IX: 1996 Buick Century Special wagon. 213-SFI. 250k miles. Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down. First documented LX9 swap in an A-body! Click here to read my build thread!

          Comment


          • #6
            fuel, spark, idle speed, fan turn on, etc. I have tweaked the 3.1 on a dyno and on the street so I have a good tune for them.
            Ben
            60DegreeV6.com
            WOT-Tech.com

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by LeftVentricle View Post
              ECM is original to the Celebrity, prom came from the Cavalier. Could that be causing the problem?

              Injectors were ordered for the Cavalier, but the part numbers were the same for both '92 Cav 3.1 and '89 Celebrity 2.8, and have the same flow rate of 15 pounds.
              I think this should work fine. The Celeberity and Cav. should had the same ECM, but I'm not sure if the mem-cal is totally the same. I think so.

              I don't know how the results could have been skewed. I watched the entire process, and saw nothing amiss. AFR was measured from exhaust gas out the tailpipe, basically like an emissions sniffer test. Only thing I didn't like is that they ran the first pull in second, then balked when I asked to run it in third, saying they didn't think my brand new, T-rated tires could withstand the potential speed.

              Tangentially, the car pretended to do 125 on that pull.
              How can you possibly accurately measure the AFR after the Cat? This car does have a Cat right?

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by manicmechanix View Post
                How can you possibly accurately measure the AFR after the Cat? This car does have a Cat right?
                Yes. If not for AFR, why would they do that?
                Kaiser George IX: 1996 Buick Century Special wagon. 213-SFI. 250k miles. Never gonna give you up, never gonna let you down. First documented LX9 swap in an A-body! Click here to read my build thread!

                Comment


                • #9
                  dont most of them do that? either that or use a o2 or something right?
                  sigpic

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by LeftVentricle View Post
                    Yes. If not for AFR, why would they do that?

                    Well as far as I know all testing after the Cat is going to really tell you is how well your Cat is working. Why they would do that? My guess is because they're too lazy to loop a wideband O2 sensor where the original O2 sensor is located. I don't see how any reading after the Cat can be valid, but maybe some knowledgable tuner people can comment on that.

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                    • #11
                      An O2 sensor placed after the cat typically reads .5 leaner than precat readings, but this varies.

                      Lots of controversy over whether a WB in the tailpipe is of much use, here's a couple of threads that discuss this

                      I've got an NGK AFX on the way and I want to use it to dial my car in and then remove it so I can use it on some customers cars. So basically I don't want to permanently mount it. Is the tailpipe clamp from Innovate a useful product since I don't have cats on the car? http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21QJEY97SPL._SL500_AA252_.jpg


                      For those that tune cars outside of their own; either for fun or for $$$ or both. What is the best way to have a travel WB? Do you weld a bung into the car and attach your personal wideband? Have the consumer purchase a wideband? Or Just use the tailpipe sniffer at the local dyno and run in the 0-5V signal? Also - is a wide band less nessecary on a stock car with bolt ons than say an FI car? Just looking at what would be a good solution to have a portable WB to use if in fact a year


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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by TiredGXP View Post
                        An O2 sensor placed after the cat typically reads .5 leaner than precat readings, but this varies.

                        Lots of controversy over whether a WB in the tailpipe is of much use, here's a couple of threads that discuss this

                        I've got an NGK AFX on the way and I want to use it to dial my car in and then remove it so I can use it on some customers cars. So basically I don't want to permanently mount it. Is the tailpipe clamp from Innovate a useful product since I don't have cats on the car? http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/21QJEY97SPL._SL500_AA252_.jpg


                        For those that tune cars outside of their own; either for fun or for $$$ or both. What is the best way to have a travel WB? Do you weld a bung into the car and attach your personal wideband? Have the consumer purchase a wideband? Or Just use the tailpipe sniffer at the local dyno and run in the 0-5V signal? Also - is a wide band less nessecary on a stock car with bolt ons than say an FI car? Just looking at what would be a good solution to have a portable WB to use if in fact a year


                        Thanks for the info. I need to do some tuner reading. On top of the variable the Cat adds, with or without a Cat, I seriously doubt a heated wide-band O2S would get hot enough to give a valid output at the tailpipe. There might be sophisticated equipment that i don't know about that can, but still I doubt that's the case. If you could just stick an HO2S anywhere, automakers wouldn't be putting two of them ahead of the converter right up next to the exhaust manifolds since the one downstream from Cat would suffice.

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                        • #13
                          They use them both to check cat efficiency.
                          Ben
                          60DegreeV6.com
                          WOT-Tech.com

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