In the last month I have gone through about 50 more tunes trying to sort the issue of controlling the boost with the throttle while the boost pressure is under the waste gate cracking pressure. I have had limited success.
WOT is great, car is fast and runs as expected. Less than 50% throttle up to 7,000rpm is good. It isn't "butter smooth", but it is fairly smooth and totally reasonable to daily drive. It is 60%-80% throttle at above 4,000rpm where everything goes wrong and I get the horrible "kangaroo-ing" throttle/boost.
Kangaroo-ing ->
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1E6USTu7CwxQg5MGBVDAwTqEszm3N8jLZKFVPDKSD ->
https://drive.google.com/open?id=11qR5cZURsyw3TWhiqz-ZQUMmJZqiKZEXWDKUGDN ->
https://drive.google.com/open?id=19HPbVIqw8H-5UvlYQh5WQTAlIFI9JiVeKFVPDKSD/EI agree with prj that the only rational way to define this map is by taking logs at 0% WGDC and 100% throttle to see where you need to close the throttle to control the boost (i.e, requested pressure ratio can be achieved and exceeded at a given RPM) and where the throttle should be 100% open (i.e, requested pressure ratio cannot be achieved at a given RPM). This map is fairly trivial to rough in, much more difficult to fine tune when you consider what
WDKUGDN has to look like.
One of the issues I ran across was that I have these logs in 30 degree F ambient temperatures and 90 degree F ambient temperatures an there is a big difference in what pressure ratios can be achieved for a given RPM. The difference between 30 degrees and 90 degrees might be a pressure ratio that varies as much as 0.5 for the same given RPM and that can shift you a few columns to the left or right in
KFVPDKSD/E. I opted to take the most aggressive logs (cold weather) and use those. Worst case is I am over throttled in hot weather.
WDKUGDNTo actually control the boost with the throttle (especially at high RPM)
WDKUGDN has to close down the throttle aggressively. A throttle position of somewhere between 16-22% seems to be the sweet spot. Closing the throttle more than 16% seems to put the engine close enough to vacuum that the DV's will release in a rapid cycling manner, or maybe it is a surging issue... However, even at 20% you will see the boost creep up as the RPMs increase.
Log ->
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1QREWRBu_SXp0FObmGIPpV1okiY_K9lXM.
Because the difference between
WDKUGDN and the requested throttle angle at a high throttle/high rpm is so large, even a small change in the Z-values in
KFVPDKSD/E have a huge effect on the throttle angle. Another issue I see is that the MAP sensor is upstream of the throttle body and the compressor wheels of the Tial's 770's can have a lot of angular momentum. This means a big change in throttle position at high rpm can cause a big pressure wave back upstream towards the turbos. The result is pvdkds spikes (MAP is pre-throttle body) but the pressure in the intake manifold can drop to near vacuum which causes the DV's to dump followed by a series neck snapping kangaroos. Also, this can't be good for the turbos.
The Point:I have basically exhausted every reasonable set of values for
KFVPDKSD/E and
WDKUGDN. Because of the differences in PR for ambient temperatures, the low resolution of the maps, the basically infinite number of ways a pair of X and Y values can be interpolated for in the maps, the transience of the turbos, the pre-throttle body MAP and the throttle angle required to control boost at high RPM... it is extremely difficult (maybe impossible) to get this right. I know others have claimed they have nailed this with similar setups, I am skeptical.
The Future:I think prj is onto something with inverted DV's and the DV's needing to dump excess boost. I have seen AMD cars with inverted DV's and wondered for a long time what the reasoning behind them was. It would be reasonable to assume the issues I have been seeing are why the DV's have been inverted. So, next step is to try that. Feel free to explain why I am totally wrong and everyone else has "butter smooth" big turbos.
Update: First try with inverted Forge DV's with a stiff spring is a failure. I can't get over 2-3psi of boost. Obviously a big pressure differential, I am thinking I can't get the engine completely out of vacuum, but I'll trouble shoot and give it another go if I can find something wrong.