Roger 04 RT
Registered user
John,
You are doing an impressive job of map discovery and experimentation, well done!
If you have found 100 maps, then you should be able to identify the two I mentioned a couple posts ago for TPS and TPS rate-of-change.
There are three steps to remapping:
1) find the maps and properly identify the axes for each.
2) change the map and test its impact by measuring the change with an LC-2 ahead of any Cat. You have an LC-2 now, why don't you show us some of the detailed logs you've taken? And show the changes at different RPMs and actual road loads. The LC-2 logs are easy to plot.
3) understand the interaction of the map changed with Closed Loop Mixture Adaptation, nothing in this thread shows those measurements.
Regarding testing, the dyno does a poor job confirming your changes do what you say. The initial conditions of RPM and Lambda are most always too lean. The dyno roller only produces 1/2 the road-load at low RPMs and about 1/3 the road-load at high RPMs. And in any case only measures about 6 of the 300 points in the fuel and spark maps. And each of the 6 points is tested for 1 second or less, not long enough to measure the work done by horsepower.
I would say you're doing a great job finding the maps and changing them but still have work to do to measure what the changes do, and a lot more work to understand the how the changes interact with Closed Loop Mixture Adaptation.
Lastly, why not shift lambda on the closed loop bikes and make a map for that? You seem to resist that idea and are missing the best possibility. After all its the low RPMs at small to medium throttle angles that riders care about. Do it matter what the HP is at WOT and 7000 RPM for most riders?
You are doing an impressive job of map discovery and experimentation, well done!
If you have found 100 maps, then you should be able to identify the two I mentioned a couple posts ago for TPS and TPS rate-of-change.
There are three steps to remapping:
1) find the maps and properly identify the axes for each.
2) change the map and test its impact by measuring the change with an LC-2 ahead of any Cat. You have an LC-2 now, why don't you show us some of the detailed logs you've taken? And show the changes at different RPMs and actual road loads. The LC-2 logs are easy to plot.
3) understand the interaction of the map changed with Closed Loop Mixture Adaptation, nothing in this thread shows those measurements.
Regarding testing, the dyno does a poor job confirming your changes do what you say. The initial conditions of RPM and Lambda are most always too lean. The dyno roller only produces 1/2 the road-load at low RPMs and about 1/3 the road-load at high RPMs. And in any case only measures about 6 of the 300 points in the fuel and spark maps. And each of the 6 points is tested for 1 second or less, not long enough to measure the work done by horsepower.
I would say you're doing a great job finding the maps and changing them but still have work to do to measure what the changes do, and a lot more work to understand the how the changes interact with Closed Loop Mixture Adaptation.
Lastly, why not shift lambda on the closed loop bikes and make a map for that? You seem to resist that idea and are missing the best possibility. After all its the low RPMs at small to medium throttle angles that riders care about. Do it matter what the HP is at WOT and 7000 RPM for most riders?
Roger here is my latest project on a R1100S.
I found 100 maps.
Here are :
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