There is a book titled how to tune and modify engine management systems. I highly recommend it.
The FPR has a reference port to the manifold pressure on virtually every EFI system. It is there to simply keep the difference in pressure between fuel in the fuel rail and the air in the intake manifold the same. This makes for one less variable when tuning an internal combustion engine which has enough variables already.
If you look at higher flow MAFs for mustangs for example. They are calibrated for a given flow of air. Most manufacturers make a few different sizes. Using the all out racing one on all cars would not yeild as accurate a reading at idle and part throttle as sizing it for the customers power level no more no less. Think of it as like screen resolution.
It is refered to as sensor resolution by the electronic engineering types. Another interesting thing to note is that as the sensors airflow increases the injector size they recommend goes up. More air does mean more fuel but there is more to it than that. At idle and part throttle cruise a modified engines air intake is not that much different than stock as compared to the difference when either version of the engine is making full power. So just changing injectors will result in a super rich condition at idle. Remember how I said making the MAF much larger and or less restricted can result in a lower sensor output at low rpm or part throttle? Well guess how they get the idle right well a big part of it anyway. You guessed it! The engine thinks less air is going in so the injectors are triggered to spend less time open on their pulses therby compensating for the larger injectors.
Here are my recomendations for what to do for increasing performance. Tune it. You could put every engine mod imaginable in place or just a few. No matter which one of these situatons is at hand accurate tuning will always be needed to get them to their potential.
Get the newer type MAF sensor if it does not have it already.
Get E-manage, USB programing kit and maybe the ignition tuning kit if you want to take it that far.
Get a wided band 02 sensor.
I might be running the E-manage system on my turbo build instead of AEM EMS since keeping all the non engine bells and wistles running (ABS, Electronic trans etc) is easy with a piggy back tuner. It is all possible with the AEM but I would have to figure a ton of things out on my own. They do it with AEM for the supra but I doubt their engineering team will make a plug and play system for the cruiser any time soon. Reading up on them I have realized this is much better than the piggyback EMS systems of yesterday.
The FPR has a reference port to the manifold pressure on virtually every EFI system. It is there to simply keep the difference in pressure between fuel in the fuel rail and the air in the intake manifold the same. This makes for one less variable when tuning an internal combustion engine which has enough variables already.
If you look at higher flow MAFs for mustangs for example. They are calibrated for a given flow of air. Most manufacturers make a few different sizes. Using the all out racing one on all cars would not yeild as accurate a reading at idle and part throttle as sizing it for the customers power level no more no less. Think of it as like screen resolution.
It is refered to as sensor resolution by the electronic engineering types. Another interesting thing to note is that as the sensors airflow increases the injector size they recommend goes up. More air does mean more fuel but there is more to it than that. At idle and part throttle cruise a modified engines air intake is not that much different than stock as compared to the difference when either version of the engine is making full power. So just changing injectors will result in a super rich condition at idle. Remember how I said making the MAF much larger and or less restricted can result in a lower sensor output at low rpm or part throttle? Well guess how they get the idle right well a big part of it anyway. You guessed it! The engine thinks less air is going in so the injectors are triggered to spend less time open on their pulses therby compensating for the larger injectors.
Here are my recomendations for what to do for increasing performance. Tune it. You could put every engine mod imaginable in place or just a few. No matter which one of these situatons is at hand accurate tuning will always be needed to get them to their potential.
Get the newer type MAF sensor if it does not have it already.
Get E-manage, USB programing kit and maybe the ignition tuning kit if you want to take it that far.
Get a wided band 02 sensor.
I might be running the E-manage system on my turbo build instead of AEM EMS since keeping all the non engine bells and wistles running (ABS, Electronic trans etc) is easy with a piggy back tuner. It is all possible with the AEM but I would have to figure a ton of things out on my own. They do it with AEM for the supra but I doubt their engineering team will make a plug and play system for the cruiser any time soon. Reading up on them I have realized this is much better than the piggyback EMS systems of yesterday.