ok, so add to my summary list the fact that you are worried that the truck may not go into closed loop mode when it should and dump a bunch of gas in there. i agree that is also a reasonable concern. but before i try to understand it i want to address something else.
I am worried, it will not go into open loop when it should.
Christo, something i finally articulated in my previous post is the fact that the neutral "correct" fuel trim map for a given truck is partially learned by the ECU.
Yes, but only under closed loop.
for example, we know that turbocruiser's boosted truck is running the landtank maf with a wideband sensor and showing outstanding neutral fuel trim and AFR, even though it seeing higher than stock air volume at a given air flow or boost, and even though it is not getting the benefit of increased FPR fuel pressure when it is under boost.
Yes, I am not disputing this. What I am saying is there is no way to know if this is due to benefits of MAF (as claimed) or the fuel pressure differential that drops off (due to boost in manifold) and thus less fuel is injected per injector firing. The net result if the truck is running leaner.
there is no way that could be happening unless the ECU fuel trim map for turbocruiser has adjusted itself to take into account the extra air volume from the maf.
Yes it can, the pressure drops, less fuel goes in. Truck runs leaner. Now there is also more air flowing, but we do not know how that is reported (ie, response curve of the sensor) So we have no idea what is fed to the computer. Bottom line is, it is correcting, and by luck and testing different sensors they got it close. It is just the wrong way to go around choosing a sensor.
if it didn't do that, then under boost, the truck should be running very lean and showing major ltft issues both because it has a bigger air opening than stock and because the FPR pressure is limited to atmospheric pressure.
Yes that is what I would expect. I have yet to see a log showing LTFT values for normal drive cycles. Rick posted it was around +2 for him and -6 for trucks up here. I would like to see those or when time permits I will gather some with the truck we have here.
since it is not doing that, the ecu's definition of "normal fuel trim" must vary from truck to truck within certain parameters.
Not sure what you mean here.
therefore that means the 18% fuel trim discrepancy at idle with the FPR connected is a variation from the tweaked fuel map that takes into account the extra air flow.
Yes, 18% more fuel is added to get the mixture right with the new MAF. Rick proposed that the stock MAF reads wrong (or not very accurate) at idle and the FPR was used to lean it out. All I did was ask for proof of this incorrect reading.
so it is not the extra air volume showing up but something that causes the engine to run leaner than the ecu expects based on a fuel map that incorporates that extra air volume.
So what is making it run lean so that the truck needs to add fuel?
does this make sense? it is the only way i can see to reconcile how turbocruiser (and others) are not running with constant significant ltft issues.
Again, I would like to see the LTFT logs to confirm this.