Merp wrote:
dschultz wrote:
Have a look at the conversion formula. Can you explain how it is suppose to work, because it doesn't.
I already explained how ̶i̶t̶ ̶i̶s̶ ̶s̶u̶p̶p̶o̶s̶e̶d̶ ̶t̶o̶ ̶w̶o̶r̶k̶ it works.
Can you explain were the value 2707090 comes from in the formula?
Merp wrote:
Quote:
I used two sets of injectors, one set being stock and the other higher flow than stock and had the tests perform by the same company using the same test process. This removes all the ambiguity you just described and we end up with two known flow rates and an easy way to arrive at the ratio to make table adjustments with.
I guess I forgot to mention the fact the tests were perform by the same company.
That doesn't eliminate the possibility of variances between the individual tests, and does not remove the ambiguity I described between test conditions and in situ conditions.
True, but what percentage of variance would you expect to see between repeated tests on the same test system where most everything is controlled and/or known?
Merp wrote:
The figures you are getting from DW are only applicable to a certain set of conditions, which obviously, are different than what is going on in situ, plain and simple.
Yes they are. But they are more consistent and comparable to each other then trying to compare a derived estimated flow rate for gasoline from the ROM value to the measured flow rate of the injector with a different test liquid.
So you are agreeing with me that you can't compare the ROM flow rate with the test sheet flow rate from DW.
Merp wrote:
Quote:
It becomes irrelevant when you know what you have and know what you are installing. Just use the ratio and make the change just like any other table.
An inaccurate conversion for the sake of a convenient estimation of the flow rate is less than helpful when tuning. You wouldn't like it if that was the case with the timing table would you?
A similar unit structure that you can plug ballpark figures into is much more preferable to some number that is not meaningful or easy to comprehend. Furthermore, using a u̶s̶e̶c̶ usec/g-air/stoich-rev value requires you do take an extra step to invert the difference in flow ratings. More complexity for no good reason.
Nobody can easily grasp what usec/g-air/stoich-rev means. I would much rather have timing table with degree units, even if its degrees retarded from 2.5* ATDC, rather than ATU clock cycle counts, wouldn't you?
And nobody needs to worry or care about the units for the flow rate value in the ROM. We've already both agreed it is not a flow rate at all. So why not present it in the defs that way. It is a value that is adjust like any other value that needs adjustment when changing injectors.
Everyone knows their stock flow rate. There's enough test data on the stock injectors on various forums that we can reliably calculate the adjustment ratio.
For my case my stock injectors have been tested at 551cc/min. The injectors I installed where tested at 741cc/min. 551/741 is the ratio that all injector related values is adjusted by.
Here's an example (based on my ROM and data sheets) of what happens when you enter in the flow rate from the data sheet (which is what I suspect most people do when they change injectors, I did Did you?).
Stock ROM raw injector size value is: 5200
If I enter the data sheet mean flow rate (741cc/min) of the new injectors to be installed into the Editor def's formula, it converts that to a raw size value of:
2707090/741 = 3653
If instead I use the old/new injector flow ratio method to adjust the raw size value, what I get is:
5200*(551/741) = 3866
Now we can determine the difference in the calculation methods:
3866-3653 = 213
That's about a (213/3866) 5% error in the raw size value that is going to written back to the new ROM for flashing. You have to go make up that 5% difference somewhere. Most people will re-scale the MAF.
BTW: converting the ratio adjusted value back to a flow rate using the formula results in:
2707090/3866 = 700cc/min (again about 5% error in size)So what I'm saying is the raw injector size adjustment using the ratio method might result in less injector size error to tune out. And therefore less of a change is required to the MAF to get back to 0% AFR correct.