Porsche 996 Turbo - Upgraded from stock injectors with single conical spray pattern with 20 degree cone to (Bosch 298) injectors with dual cone spray pattern that is separated by 25 degrees.
Steady state fuel trims are good (less than 3% throughout the MAF range) following TVUB and KRKTE changes. WOT lambda is on target following KFLBTS changes.
Having a problem with partial throttle acceleration enrichment -- stuttering (lean out to 1.4 lambda momentarily) in low rpm range (1,200 to 2,500). Think initial take-off and cruise shift points -- both under moderate load. Worse when engine is cold soaked (initial start-up).
Need some advice regarding this issue from anyone that has encountered in their tuning. I know I need to dial in at least some of the following tables: WFRL, KFBAKL and KFABAK. I'm logging and reviewing tip-in performance, but can't seem to make the right changes. I've left WFRL stock since decel enrichment/enleanment is pretty good and focused on BAKL and ABAK. I've progressively increased both significant amounts in the regions of concern, but the issue persists. Increased short/long splits from OEM levels of 0.10 to as high as 0.35 and observed initial lambdas low (rich) enough to stall the motor off idle (below 0.7) -- that was not fun in traffic
. Scaled up OEM KFBAKL from warm engine levels of 0.13 (yes, that is right) to values over 3.00. So, simply scaling my OEM curves up doesn't work (too rich at idle tip-in, too lean between 1500 and 2000 tip-in). I'm now at the point that I'm testing these maps with "shapes" that are significantly different from OEM (putting a big hump in the middle rpm range - distorting the OEM declining exponential curve).
Just looking for some lessons learned by folks that have been down this path before... especially after changing injectors with different spray patterns. I'm using trial and error testing at this point to find proper values, but there must be a better way...
Read the FR section ESUK, but the application notes basically say calibrating tip in should be done on an engine dyno in a very controlled environment... with a lot of test time to cover all the possible load changes.
Thanks for sharing any insights.