I tried 1.1.63 to but is seems like a gyand leep to mankind!
The firts thing I noticed that I lost 14 x 16 with spark and lambda map.
..
So. What's the best software to confert to from 1.0.73 14 x 16.
I rarely see the need for 14x16, only on highly tuned engines with hot cams and 2 valve/cyls.
With interpolation and more tuning experience you'll see how it's more important where you put the bins and not how many they are.
I can't argue with you on table resolution being bad in itself, especially if the tuning software has methods to auto-tune or manually work with the larger tables. My opinion is still that it's mainly a marketing feature, to sell more ECUs and won't make your car run faster. "Look at my shiny rims! They're twice as shiny as that other brand!! They suck! HAHAHA"
How anal should you be in following the AFR/lambda target? Perfection is not really a personal goal of mine when I tune an engine, I shoot for a decent compromise. We can always discuss perfection, but know that it is utopia.
Example : Lets say you find a torque fluctuation just around the tuning frequency of the intake runners while the cam is coming on strong. Sweeping past and load holding in a dyno in this area reveal that you need 10 points in a 1500 rpm span to get a +/- 0.01 variation in lambda at most. This is great in a tricky area of the map and you can pat your self on the back once you've nailed the fuel table - and now do the same for task for ignition advance... Never mind the difference in tuning an engine that has flow metering electronics compared to the VE based approach.
In a real-life scenario where you drive the car - will it matter?
It's like injector fuel trim, very few have the opportunity to ever do any useful adjustment since they lack the sophisticated equipment and measuring tools - but as long as there is a margin of safety in the overall tuning and the plugs look fresh you can probably sleep well at night knowing that cyl #6 won't run too lean.
Convert to 1.1.64 or later versions, it will work out fine for you. The added control and features of the more recent firmware will make the engine run even more consistently good.
On a similar note.. On my wishlist is to have clearly written if it's TPS or kPA on the Y-axis on all tables.
<<< Hi.
Does anyone have a properly configured and well-functioning maps:
MAT/TPS Fuel Enrichement
MAT/TPS Ignition Retarda
RPM/MAP MAP Corr
??
and could share them? >>>
- This is critical. if VEMS is to have commercial success, you need to include "base files" which have all of the outputs "Disabled", this will cut down on many support question.
The "good defaults" are in the default firmware configurations that are delivered in the VemsTune install package. When you do an upgrade from an earlier firmware and the new tables and settings are missing in the old one, the default ones are used from the default configuration file of the firmware you're upgrading to.
At the moment they are pretty good but can get better, and some configlets to help individual settings/tables like cranking/afterstart/warmup for gasoline and ethanol will be added, but it takes an effort from people to test and make sure they are valid, which is what I'm working on now.
After the cranking table is scaled up (maybe also afterstart enrichment) I will come up with good defaults which should make it easy to start any engine as long as you set the req fuel value according to the correct formula, and then you only need to tweak the "cranking VE" and your VE table to make things work very well for your engine.
If by setting the Injector Firing Divider to '1', Alternate Banks to '3..0', then Cranking Fire Banks While Cranking to 'All Banks' and then Cyl for Sequential, #Cyl/2 forSsemiSeq Cranking Fuel Divider to '1', will not add four times as much fuel at cranking???...
Like I said, the pulsewidth that is calculated from all the enrichments is divided over the 4-stroke cycle so the total pulsewidth is the same. To add fuel you need to alter the enrichement tables. The only thing you're doing with the cranking fuel divider is to decide how much to split the total pulsewidth over the 4-stroke cycle.