There is no high HP goal with the car. I just wanted to "update" it from CIS and learn how to tune. Plus I needed a way to drive the ignition with the manual swap (no magnet on the flywheel, so not compatible with the stock ECU). It'll stay at 130 HP or so. I had the injectors laying around, unused from a previous turbo VW project. I had them ultrasonic cleaned and tested by a shop and used them. The test report says they all flow the same at 330 cc/min. I figured it would be better to have 4 identical injectors instead of chasing issues that might have been caused by different flow values between all 4 injectors.
Just tonight, I did a bit of research on dead time and injector characteristics. My injectors are Bosch 0280150756 (T-Bird and Cougar 3.8 S/C, some Mustangs and Syclone/Typhoon).
According to this table, which is supposed to be a book figure, they flow 303 cc/min:
http://www.injectorcleaning.co.uk/flow.htm
According to this other source, which is measured test data, they flow 321 cc min:
https://www.motormanfuelinjection.com/Fuel_Injector_Flow_Rates.html
And according to the test data when I had them cleaned, they flow 330 cc min... I guess I'll use this number, I just found out I had 310 in Tunerstudio.
Then I tried to find the specified dead time for this injector P/N but couldn't find it. Seems like Bosch made a few similar models though. From 2 sources, I found out that the dead time should be around 0.46-0.4 ms at 13.2 V, not 0.9 ms!
https://www.ms4x.net/index.php?title=Fuel_Injector_Deadtimes#Bosch_0280150945 (I used the data for the 0280150945 that I interpolated to 13.2V)
https://www.phearable.net/information/tech-area/injector-dead-times.html (I used the "Mustang turbo" data, seems similar)
Also according to those sources, the battery voltage compensation should be 0.1 ms/v. I plotted the values in a graph and we are in a linear region:
At least with this I should be a little closer. I will try that. I will also install a fuel pressure gauge and see what happens in the rail during a hot restart. Funny thing is that the car had originally had a lot of hot start problems with CIS. There is a stock fuel cooler using an A/C refrigerant line coiled around the fuel line. Since my A/C was broken, I had to remove that. Now, at least it can do a hot start, but the idle will be lower for a little while. If it's 35C outside, I have to feather the throttle a bit.
Now one question about fuel mixture and catalytic converters: I wanted to play nice so I installed a cat in the exhaust. I know rich mixture can damage the cat. I set up my cruise mixture at 14.7 so the cat works. But if I idle at 13.7:1, will that damage the cat? I can't really lean it out, otherwise the idle isn't smooth.
Some of you talked about a plastic IAT sensor. Do you have a P/N? I will revisit my IAT installation. I guess under ideal conditions, the IAT during a hot restart will be about the same as when the engine was shut off minutes before? If it's higher, the sensor is heatsoaked?
I took two logs last night. A bad one, followed by one power cycle and it gave me a "good" log. Can't figure out why for now, but I will study the 2 logs carefully. Drove the car to work this morning and came back in the pouring rain. The car behaved beautifully.
One last thing. I remember PID tuning from when I was in engineering school, mechatronics class. I was pulling my hair off my head! Tough course... Digging through my memories to know what each of the 3 parameters do, I tried to set up closed-loop idle last Sunday. After a bit of fiddling, it worked! The car held a steady idle at 950 RPM. Thinking I had tamed the beast, I went to fuel it up. When I started it again, it would stall every time I pressed the clutch! I turned it off. Do I need to put set the "Closed duty" at the minimum duty I know the engine won't stall or lowest idle I want to get? The engine stalls if the valve is fully closed, around 35%. Or do I need to set up the throttle body so the engine idles with the valve fully closed at that 35%?
Thanks!!