ScarabEpic22
Member
So after thinking about this thread for a couple days I decided when I was down to about 8 gallons to top it off with about 4 gallons of E85. My 'back of the napkin' math says that I should have a tank of about 97 octane fuel, and I believe it. It feels like it's pulling harder, and looking at the timing on the Ultragauge it is holding the full advance where it often wouldn't before on 92 octane.
Sooo I got to thinking about those with E85 tunes and wondering just how hard is it to tune for this stuff. Well I did some reading on the HPTuner forum and it actually sounds really easy. I was thinking I'd have to change not only the stoich table but also mess around with a bunch of other fueling tables as well, but fear not, it's not nearly that complicated. You only have to change one table and it's not the one I was thinking.
Here is an excerpt from a thread over at HPTuners:
"When you switch to e85, you have to tell the computer to increase the fuel delivery to make the initial mix 9.8:1. If you change the stoich setting in HPT, you must also change other fueling tables to make sure the calculations stay correct. A simpler method is to tell the injectors to just deliver more fuel. This keeps all the other calculations correct, and only requires changing one table. The rule of thumb is usually to start out by telling the injectors to deliver 30% more fuel, and then tweak from there"
Easy peasy. In fact, that got me thinking back to when I installed the 42 lb injectors and couldn't figure out why MPFab's injector table was so different than mine, if he's running E85 that would explain it.
So, to update your tune for E85 should only take a few log/adjust cycles to get it sorted out and then you can start playing around with more airflow (boost) or start jacking up the timing. I'm not 100% sure I want to run E85 but if I decide to it's nice to know how simple it is!
Stew- This is definitely one way to do it, but this is getting into the "*******" a tune methodoloy...since you're tricking the ECM into thinking it's flowing less fuel (therfore commanding more), there are potentially other modifiers that will come into play. Definitely the quickest and easiest way to try it out as a quick baseline, but I'd really recommend getting a wideband O2 on your car before playing with fueling changes like this. Innovate LC1 is pretty good and cheap, was $150 a few years back so cant imagine they're much more now.
Just changing the stoich table would be the way that requires minimal tweaking to a good, 91-92 octane tune. Since we can assume the airflow model (and therefore fueling) with 92 is correct, changing to a different fuel requires changing the stoich setting and a few other tables (as mentioned above). Then you can start playing with timing and/or boost.
Here comes the BUT, you have to constantly flash tunes when you switch fuel types (AND reprogram the spark tables initially).
If instead you went to the flex fuel sender and wired it into the ECM, the ECM will switch on the fly for you as it will change the stoich point automatically based on what ethanol % it reads (note the stoich table axis is ethanol %). Also, this will use the spark biasing parameters (there are a handful) to either be a correction factor or a blanket #. Check out Spark->Advance then Spark Correction->AFR Correction and Misc->Flex Fuel to start.
Look at the Open Loop section under Fuel->Open & Closed Loop, there are some Alcohol biasing tables for OL operation that will definitely come into play with this.
I like the thinking, people like you who keep playing with it and reporting back are what drives us all forward!
And I only run 91-92 in mine now, ran 87 for the first 7-8k then put a tank of premium in. Big difference, for the extra $1-2 per tank Ill take the extra power and mileage is the same or slightly better.
Making me wish I could program around the BOV with hptuners. Tinkering sounds fun but I can't give up the pssshhhtttt every time I shift
I'll start playing with it soon enough John. Might need to pick one up and play with it, have to be a winter project though.
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