Abe wrote:Thanks, I'm pretty happy with the improvement myself. I know the car is capable, having seen 32 on the 100% OEM set up before. And cruising at 80+ verses 60 should take some hit. I agree table switching as a way for dealing with transients seems a poor solution - it always seemed to me a perfect map wouldn't need accel enrichment of any sort - I still have it in the back of my head that someday I will put a flow meter in each runner and stop messing around trying to guess what's going on. Another project, right?
About having a perfect fuel map without using transient enrichment, I know, it seems intuitive. Like it should work. I've read the technical documents as I'm sure you have too. And also like you, there's this small background thought that won't go away that believes it can work without acceleration enrichment. It's a nice hope and I wish it were possible too, Abe.
Direct cylinder injection will not use acceleration enrichment. But then direct injection doesn't buffer and evaporate fuel from the port wall. A condition that requires active control in all but one condition, steady state cruise.
A possible solution is to go for creating a best power afr during acceleration, best efficiency afr during cruise, and lean-limit-of-combustion during decel.
Abe wrote:The point I take issue with is "high TPS, high MAP" cruise. That's not a cruise. I used to say that on my kawasaki - I don't know how the engine behaves under steady state load because I can't get a steady state on a 500 lb, 250 hp vehicle.
Similarly, with the car, putting anywhere near 300 hp to the ground (high map, high tps) means I won't be cruising. period. In fact, no time where the throttle is above SOME number am I cruising.
Maybe this amounts to a difference in the use of the word. Cruise traditionally means steady state, as in no acceleration. A motor moving the car at a steady speed, at terminal velocity, at WOT, no acceleration, is in a cruise condition.
That steady terminal velocity cruise can be at a best power afr, or at a best efficiency afr. The only difference being, on average, some few percentage points of power. At medium triple digit top speeds, a few percent power increase doesn't increase terminal velocity very much.
It's like the 1001hp 250mph Bugatti. It takes 10hp to do 62.5mph, 100hp to do 125, and 1000hp to do 250mph. The new model has 350 more hp, 1350 total! But travels only 11mph or so faster with those 350hp.
- Jim