I agree with this statement.
I consider the lambda sensor is there to inform the ecu when the air fuel ratio varies from 14.7 to 1 ( in fact pulsed either side of this to enable the catalytic converter to work).
The ecu then alters the injector pulse width to maintain this 14.7 t0 1 AFR.
If the base map is altered the lambda sensor will detect the AFR is wrong and report it back to the ecu.....
I have installed a wide band lambda sensor ( for data logging) in the exhaust just behind the stock narrow band sensor and find it quite surprising how it manages to control the AFR to 14.7 to 1 in closed loop.
Which takes me back to my initial question. How can the base map be altered to change the AFR with the lambda circuit working in closed loop.?
Almost there .. It is a simple sensor. It changes voltage output in response to changes in the AFR, that voltage is measured back to the ECU.
The ECU makes the decision whether the AFR is wrong or not.
If you install a device that alter the information sent be the sensor, then the ECU is making the deicsions based on altered information. It does not know that the information has been altered. So your lamdba sensor sends a volatge output that equates to an AFR of 13.7, your device "adjusts" tha voltage by a factor of 0.93; assuming the voltage/AFR curve is linear, the ECU recieves a signal voltage from what it thinks is the lambda sensor in the exhaust saying that the AFR is 13.7/0.93=14.7, it really came from your device.
Now, if the ECU has a target AFR of 14.7 for the the load it is managing according to all the other sensors, then it will probably do nothing to the fuel mixture. It thinks it is running as lean as the man from BMW wants, but you have got an engine that is running as rich as you want....
It is only a matter of semantics, I suspect we are saying the same thing, i.e. that the lambda signal does influence the ECU, just the pedants like me pick up on the suggestion that the lambda is somehow "in control". It is just piece of very expensive metal whose electrical properties change when subjected to specific heat and gas concentrations. What to do with that information is decided by the ECU ...
Sorry, I promised myself I would not enter this one, work is that boring today

eyes: but if you are still on the fence don't be put off by some of the technical stuff on here, some people just 'need to know' how things work, and TBH the world would be a poorer place without them.
you gonna ban me or beat me up for airing my opinion, on a PUBLIC forum 
