Well silly or not, i dont have the time to go to a dyno and tune ignition timing, especially when im only starting on the 'tuning' process in whole! If id go now on a dyno,it would be a bigger waste of money for me to try and find what is the best thing to do.
When you say 'base timing' settings, what do you mean? Do you mean the spark table itself OR the configuration to which VEMS is relying on to see where the angle is?If that is the case,then would stock cam audi RS2s have different configuration? if not then the settings should be right.
As i posted before, i have tested vems with higher AND lower ignition timing settings and the lower ones gave me higher egt's while the higher made the engine stress out (for that amount of fueling) without giving me any EGTs closer to the motronic.SO that is how i conclude that with VEMS the appropriate lamda ends up being rich, not at least stoich for cruising speeds!What do i have to do to make it proper? advance it to 60deg???
The whole comparison of the 2 ECUs is based on the fact that the engine is excactly the same.Nothing has changed.Therefore there shouldnt be any HUGE differences on timing that would allow that big of a difference in how the engine perfoms or reacts. On motronic i get a more freeflowing car,with less stress and EGTs. My simple question is, HOW do i get VEMS to do the same???
It SHOULD be possible for the engine,since it is already done by motronic,which is a much older and less sofisticated ECU than VEMS.
To just say,tune it to go well and dont mind about EGTs is wrong IMO because all tuners watch what the EGTs are doing when they are tuning. Knockless and low EGTs is the best thing you can achieve.
Besides,im trying to build an everyday car here,not a drag race car that would be stripped on every second occasion,so i cannot afford to do mistakes.
Finally,if i were to pay someone to tune VEMS for me, id rather pay someone to retune the motronic on my next upgrade and figure vems out on my own.