Author Topic: Using a MAF sensor  (Read 4739 times)

Offline Denmark

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Using a MAF sensor
« on: September 11, 2007, 12:14:05 pm »
Hi All,

Have any of You tried to use a maf sensor for load, instead of the Map sensor?,

I ask , becourse i run a Toyota 4age with ITB´s and turbo, and i have some trooble running it like that,
I runs great on WOT(all the way to 8500rpm), and light load op to around 5k rpm, thn it´s running really rich, and yes i just lean it out,
but the next time i use the same load zone, then it can be different, if the road is not straight.

SO i also got a really strange ve table, as all other then WOT need almost none fuel, but i need some of the higher map area´s to stay rich,as i had it on dyno, and the boost dropped o,1bar more, then on the road, and it got as lean as lambda 0.93.

/Skassa
working on the boxer

Offline dnb

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Re: Using a MAF sensor
« Reply #1 on: September 11, 2007, 02:57:32 pm »
Interesting - I wonder if this is a manifestation of the same problem I had with the Griffith?

I found there was a MAT error, such that the MAT sensor reading changed non-linearly with manifold temperature, resulting in the air mass calculation being "differently incorrect" depending on temperature.

I found this was usually a small effect on the Griffith (NA car, usually running with a tightly controlled MAT) but sometimes the EGO correction couldn't cope in VE table cells where it was usually good.

I am writing some Perl to analyse this, but it's not fit for distribution yet.  I suspect that you could filter a good size log file to extract all the MAT readings and Ego corrections for a particular VE cell and plot one against the other.  If there's a correlation with a non-zero gradient then you have found the problem.

MAF would negate all of these problems as a matter of course.  You would just set the airflow correction table for MAT globally to 100% in the firmware and use MAT purely as an indicator.  Of course, the VE map would be a little weird when based on MAF, but it'll work fine - just connect it as you would an external MAP sensor.

Not too sure how boost control would work then, as it is expecting a MAP sensor...