klonek78 wrote:
PS. EGT gauge is very necessary....
For me the EGT is not GOOD
EGT is for mediocre projects
You just need a WideBand O2 Sensor to read the exact AFR and Tune with it
my 2 cents
Belive me it is not enough... I have wideband AFR and EGT in my car and despite of that I set AFR to 13.0 at 5000rpm EGT went over 950degC (900 is max. for stock engines) - too hot. So I had to set AFR to 12,3 at higher rpms to avoid melting pistons.....
There seems to be a lot of mystery and misinformation about using exhaust gas temperatures to tune engines. Claims by many EGT gauge manufacturers about it being the best way to tune an engine must be qualified. The BEST way to tune an engine is on an engine dyno- PERIOD. What EGT is good for is a reference for where the engine made maximum torque at wide open throttle. Once removed from the dyno, a similar air/fuel ratio can be established at a later date by dialing in the mixture to achieve the target EGT. It is really the AFR that is important, not the EGT. Most engines will make maximum power at an AFR of between 12.0 and 13.5 to 1 however, the EGT may vary from 1250F to 1800F and is dependent on many factors.
It should be mentioned that the target EGT is valid only on the same engine configuration as was used on the dyno. If you change the ignition timing, cams, pistons, headers etc., the optimum EGT may also change. Raising the compression ratio with no other changes will drop the EGT at the same AFR. Retarding the ignition timing will generally raise the EGT at the same AFR. One engine might make best power at 1350 degrees while a very similar engine might be happier at 1500. You can't guess at this or you are simply wasting your money on the instrumentation. Wankel engines have higher EGTs than comparable piston engines due to their lower thermal efficiencies. 1800F is not uncommon here.
Some gauge manufacturers say you should tune to achieve maximum or peak EGT for maximum performance. This is incorrect. Peak EGT generally occurs at an AFR of around 14.7- 15.0 to 1 on gasoline. This is far too lean for maximum power and is dangerous under continuous WOT conditions. Many people think that the leaner you go, the higher the EGT gets. This is also incorrect. Peak EGT occurs at stoichiometry- about 15 to 1 for our purposes. If you go richer than 15 to 1, EGT will drop and if you go leaner than 15 to 1 EGT will ALSO drop. It is VERY important to know which side of peak EGT you are on before making adjustments. It is safe to say that peak power will occur at an EGT somewhat colder than peak EGT.
You can sometimes feel a lean of peak condition as the mixture is hard to ignite and power will be down a bit as well. Once the AFR gets close to 17 to 1 at WOT, generally the engine will start to lean misfire. Most tuners always recommend to begin jetting or programming from a known very rich initial setting and carefully leaning until torque falls off slightly, then going back richer to the point of max torque. Note the EGT at this setting. Be aware that altitude, barometric pressure and ambient air temperature may affect this optimal temperature to some degree.
Are EGT gauges better than AFR meters? Conventional narrow band oxygen sensors and digital LED meters are not the best devices to measure AFR in the richer ranges but they certainly warn of a too lean condition immediately and obviously, without translation by the driver and they are affordable. Meters combined with wide band sensors are supposed to be highly accurate and everyone has jumped on the bandwagon with these lately. Unfortunately the naive and impressionable often don't question the accuracy of these devices. We have seen some dyno plots indicating best power was achieved at AFRs of 9.7 to 1 on gasoline. This is PHYSICALLY AND CHEMICALLY IMPOSSIBLE and shows that either the sensor was bad (leaded fuel used possibly) or the meter was not calibrated properly. Again, the wide band sensors have the same limitations as the narrow band- leaded race gas quickly fouls them. We have heard and read many stories now indicating that certain brands of wideband meters differ as much as 2 points AFR in readings between each other. In other words, the accuracy of some of these devices is highly questionable. Extensive testing with laboratory quality instrumentation on aircraft engines universally indicates that best power is NEVER made at AFRs richer than 12 to 1. Airflow and fuel flow rates are independently measured and each cylinder is instrumented with EGT probes.
We recently dynoed a shop road racing Celica on a DynoJet equipped with a wide band meter. The meter was saying that the engine was going super lean (17 to 1) at high rpm so we kept upping the fuel there. The engine lost more and more power as we added fuel. The dyno operator was convinced that the meter was right but logic told us with no serious dip in power on the curve and the fact that the engine was still alive that the meter was not correct. We started leaning the engine down more and the engine started gaining power. Finally, when confronted with this information, the operator checked the water trap for the wide band sensor. Once this was emptied, the AFRs looked reasonable again. We didn't need the wide band to tell us this, only the torque curve from the dyno.
We have heard of several other instances with people using wide bands getting erroneous readings and tuning their SDS based on these readings. Then they phone us saying that the system is crap. Look at the dyno curve, when the engine makes its best power at a given rpm, that's where it likes the AFR regardless of what other instrumentation is telling you. Remember, a bad sensor whether O2 or EGT equals bad information. When the engine sounds crisp and makes great power, you're there.
I would suggest that mixture meters and EGT gauges are complimentary. EGT gauges have the advantage of working long term with leaded fuel which will clog oxygen sensors. EGT gauges are widely used to set mixture on engines used for steady state high power applications where operation has been carefully documented such as in aircraft. The choice would depend on the application. Both are better if you can afford them.
Mitsubishi Eclipse GST 304whp 319tq @22psi w EVO 3 16G Daily Driven DAEWOO Nubira 2.2L Turbo 217whp 204tq @13psi SOLD
You have right! AFR is the most important value, but when EGT goes to high you must add more fuel and change AFR or retard ingition - without EGT you won't know about it and despite having good AFR your pistons would damage.
Wideband AFR meter AND egt would be best. Narrowband is not helpful with turbo tuning since it works very much in a all rich or all lean manner (too black and white).
For a turbo car - arent you meant to tune for around a low 12 AFR under boost - like klonek78 mentioned to keep EGT down?
The cause of my failure is still unknown - but the likely cause is bad/rough tune...
13.0 @ full boost is to lean un less your using VP race fuel and step colder spark plugs
i know if you r not @ full boost or in the RPMs for the boost you dont need 13.0 afr
i understand that tunning in piggybacks work with TPS and RPM's
btw how your car can get to 5000 rpm with only a 20% on TPS ?
It's quite easy.... Try to ride downhill I found few "map holes" in that way when EGT grows too high.
and yes I'm using Shell V-PowerRacing 100octans fuel with BERU SuperX 4-electrode spark plugs.
make sure the oil feed lines to the turbo are good, and the same for the return line. it sounds like low oil pressure in the turbo causing it to skip or "chirp" (dry bearings chirp momentarily until they become relubricated).
get that cleared up quickly as the longevity of the turbo is at stake
so it is just oil feed issue huh?? me and Zikas suspected more frightining things like busted turbo oil seals (me) or faulty head gasket (Zikas).
we took the feed line right off the oil pump so i thing their are no pressure issues here... could it be a problem with the line itself beeing restrictive or sharply bent somewhere??
oil seal, good idea to check. check the lines for kinks, uphill flow, and blockages (blow through it to make sure it's clear). a head gasket would make far worse symptoms than that, and would be more noticeable under load