Philip A: I don't want to start an argument but I have to say you're just plain wrong about several important things regarding MegaSquirt.
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Maybe what is wrong with his car is a combination of worn out injectors, worn out sensors, worn out AFM."
If the injectors are worn / down on flow it doesn't matter because you can just increase the fuelling to compensate. Not the best solution but it will work fine for a considerable length of time (years).
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Won't he have too buy all new with a Megasquirt anyway (except the AFM)???"
No - it uses all the EFi hardware that's already there. Injectors, throttle pot, coolant sensor. You need a new air temp sensor ($2) to replace the one in the now redundant AFM, and a lambda sensor ($20) if you intend on tuning it.
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You guys trivialise what is a very involved process to tune a stand alone injection sysytem."
Err, it's not that difficult. You don't need to spend days on a dyno, you just throw in a base map from one of the many available for the RV8 online, and then sit someone in the passenger seat with the laptop and let them get on with it as you drive.
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I have looked at the Megasquirt site several times and read the whole thing, and again today at the success stories. I didn't see ONE that suggested that someone had a Rover V8 up and running in a way suitable for everyday use."
Look again then.
Ones that are in everyday use / could be used everyday if they were needed are:
Dan:
Ashley:
Dave:
Puff:
Spag:
Dave White:
(Entering the Outback Challenge running MS'n'S)
Gavin - no photo 'cos he's taken the truck apart now.
And mine was also running fine until I took it apart.
I know Dan's has been used a lot recently as he had to rebuild the daily driver (300TDi Disco) so was / is commuting in the Rangie.
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Car makers spend millions just to develop start up maps."
No-one's saying these are mapped to within the accuracy you'd get from a manufacturer. However, even though half of the above are running my not-very-good base fuel map they still go at least as well as they did on the flapper EFi. The lambda sensor also takes care of the fuel economy aspect so the map being "out" does not matter once you're rolling. I had a terrible map in mine for a while, about 20% too rich across the board, and I still hit 15-20mpg on a day's playing.
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As I said on the Rangie and Disco forum today... ...Without professional help, you could be fine tuning for weeks, or months before it runs correctly. And tehre is no professional with a dyno who knows anything about it."
Righty:
1) You can get a vehicle from not starting to running on MS in a day, even with no base map to start with. I know, because that's how we did mine.
2) You can get it to a drivable map in about an hour's tuning or less, just driving on the road.
3) You can fine tune using MSTWeak and data-logging, which can take a data log from any journey and suggest new tuning settings. This will get you to within a few % of ideal for most of your map, at least the bits you use the most on the road. The other few areas either don't really matter or can be set pretty close by taking a look at the values around them.
4) There are several professionals with dynos who know about it. And a fuel map is a fuel map - you either want more fuel or less fuel at any given point on the map, it's not rocket science even if the keyboard shortcut on MegaTune is different to Alpha / Webcon / Omex's software.
Not that the dyno owner needs to know - if you've got the use of a rolling road and MSTWeak you can data log for as many load/rpm points as the rolling road can create.
5) Just how accurately tuned are most carb setups? Compared to EFi most carbs are so far off the scale it's unreal, yet they are all aparrently perfectly drivable and usable. You don't need to be super accurate to get a very drivable vehicle.
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Even the developers say that Megasquirt is experimental and not a mature system."
Mainly to avoid stupid people expecting it to plug straight in and run like a dream. It does require user input, if they didn't disclaim this can you imagine the number of idiots they'd be flooded with treating it like a commercial product?
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Megasquirts are for "nerds", not guys who do not know how to troubleshoot their existing injection."
I know how to troubleshoot existing injection systems, but quite frankly I find it faster to drop in a MS ECU (down to 90 minutes now to do this) and then be able to plug a laptop in and *see* what's wrong.
I've used this to "troubleshoot" several vehicles now, and all have shown up things that would have taken more time & money to find with the old system.
[url=http://www.juracid.co.uk/lr]109 in a million pieces - it shall rise again![/url]