The idle issue was fixed by recalibrating the tps and fixing the settings. Timing increases as it should now. Still wont rev past 2200rpm unless you stab the gas.
Shorting the hall signal to ground did not change the way it runs. Still broke up around 2000 rpm. It was hard to start and had to try a few times. It also seemed sensitive to noise (ran rough) like this.
Kamuto, there are short plug in harnesses to swap the trigger wires around (male / female connectors that swap position of the wires.)
I also took the belt off of the alternator, I've seen alternators that dumped tons of noise in the system. There was no change when i took the belt off.
I just logged for 2 hours and could not catch it dropping out with this better oscilloscope. I used both the hall signal ground and the chassis ground for the scope reference to check if the ecu wasnt grounding these well. Signals were exactly the same.
The sensor that watches flywheell teeth had a spike in the signal. The spike was double the normal voltage that the 135 teeth normally had. Im working near the coils though too, may have been the coil firing. I dont have a pic of it.
Every once in a while you see noise spikes in there. This was a long record rate on the scope that i later zoomed in on. The resolution / quality suffers.
Strange thing to note is the hall pullup voltage is only at 4.2 - 4.3v. Not sure why its not at 5v. I did measure voltages and amperage to pull the pullup voltage down. I measured between the hall sensor wires with the sensor unplugged.
I also tried to add a 4k ohm pullup resistor between the +5v and the signal wire. This didnt change the way it ran. Not sure it did much to the voltage on the signal wire. I forgot to measure it.
Im not sure what to think of the weird floating voltage between the signal wire and 5v. Cant see a good reason why this isnt at 5v. Not sure if this points to something being wrong with the ecu or if there is some strange circuitry going on in there.
Most hall sensors have a minimum rated voltage of 4.5v (but not sure what the specs are for the bosch? hall sensor in the distributor...) this could be an issue at some point.
The distributor signal seems to be inverted in the ecu or maybe externally. My assumption is something is wrong with that circuit.
I attached a trigger log and another vemslog log file.
Please let me know if the 4.2v at the hall sender is normal. I'm thinking there is something wrong in the ecu, whether its trigger setup or hardware that processes / inverts the hall signal.
Some log files here,
http://vems.hu/vemstune/bugreports/reports.php?cmd=view&key=FgcxVG