So, the issue I have had lately is a stall on deceleration when coming to a stop. It turns out that this is a common problem with the Sniper EFI install on vehicles with a manual transmission. Essentially, when I push the clutch in and ease on the brakes to coast up to a stop light, the AFR goes lean (18:1 or so) and the engine stalls. One workaround was to leave it in gear and slow to a stop and push the clutch as RPMs drop to near idle or a little less. It seemed the issue was engine load related and how the EFI adjusted the AFR when the engine load was suddenly reduced. I did not have this problem with the same kit install on my 64 Cutlass with an auto trans.
The EFI continued to learn and added fuel to the base map as it tried to correct the problem. I emailed Chris at EFISystemPro, who I bought the kit from, and included my config file and datalog for him to look at. He modified the base fuel table and emailed the file back. Because he knows what he is doing and I don't, I left it to him to see if he could figure out the problem based on the config file and datalog. I then dug into the files and looked for the difference. I learned a lot playing with the files on a computer and manipulating fuel graphs, etc. I still have not installed Chris's modified file.
What I did do was this: I disconnected my PCV valve from the back of the throttle body. The instructions say the power brake booster vacuum line goes there. I believe one part of the issue is the PB booster has a finite amount of vacuum that can be pulled while the PCV is a constant, erratic vacuum leak to the EFI. There is an idle air control valve (IAC) that adjusts air flow beyond what the butterflies do, that contribute to AFR based on throttle position (TPS). The numeric IAC value was out of whack (anywhere from 0 to 30%). One post on a Holley forum recommended the IAC value to be 10-20% for a manual transmission.
I also reset my timing and checked it two or three times after revving the engine. Once I knew timing was where I wanted it (12* BTDC) I tuned the idle, TPS, and IAC for about an hour to get the right values. All that was involved was tuning the idle until the IAC was somewhere around 10%, turning the truck off to reset the TPS back to zero (it resets when powered off) and starting the truck again to watch the idle RPM (850- ish), IAC % (near 10%), and the TPS ( 0%= zero throttle input). All done. I drove this morning to the gas station, filled up the tank, and had zero problems. I ran the truck to all 3 forward gears, hitting 5K on the tach in first and second, trying to create an issue. Had none. I will run errands in my 40 this weekend and see what else happens.
Happy wrenching....
Grady