I think, if I understand this correctly, that this is the key bit here.. (for me at least) Measure... IAT, EGT, yep I get.. Measure Load tho? (from ecu? a calculated value)
Load is cylinder filling. Not understanding this, is not understanding what Motronic is about.
non egt cars cannot be tuned in this way is my suggestion.. No way would you want to rely on downstream lambda heater temps for tuning against egt's.
ME7 has an EGT model. If you don't have a properly calibrated EGT model, then you can't use EGT to fuel off. When the EGT model is properly calibrated, it is usually pretty damn accurate.
Where a GT3071 is "small" to you, what level of power are you tuning via egt's etc for?
Let's just say, GT30R+, but this is irrelevant, I was saying it tongue in cheek. You'd have to screw up pretty bad to blow up an engine on ME7 anyway. 200hp/litre is baby power for it.
Now this I don't see your point. KFLBTS has a Act Load axis. So, it doesn't just enrich via RPM only. Factor in the load axis and the map can handle low verse high gears.
Nope. My point is you can have 700 EGT at 6000 rpm in 3rd, or 900 in 6th at same load. Is the fueling need equal? Please do tell.
If you map via RPM and LOAD as done on all old ECU's, you must run not enough timing and too rich in low gears, so that high gears don't knock. That's why I said tuning is not steady state, and tuning is not 3rd gear pulls.
Just something quick to add to this...I've heard said several times in this thread that fueling is not RPM dependent. This is generally not true. In most occasions for a given load value, your lambda value should be getting richer as RPM increases.
You basically just said exactly what I have been saying. Except RPM does not factor into the equation.
The correct measurement is combustion chamber temperature and exhaust gas temperature. The higher the combustion chamber temperature gets, the lower the knock threshold. The lower the threshold, the more timing is retarded. The more timing is retarded, the more EGT rises, as more energy is converted into heat. The fact that it occurs with higher RPM is logical, but when you have the ability to fuel off of combustion chamber temperature directly, it is much better than mapping based off of RPM, which is just a side effect of things.
The reason older ECU's are mapped via RPM, is because they don't have an EGT model, they don't have EGT measurements, there is no way to model the combustion chamber.
But the actual req fuel for best power constantly drifts, and if timing is advanced sufficiently, then it is almost directly proportional to EGT.
It's good we have discussions like this though. Perhaps it will remind people, that the ability to change a few numbers in the ECU and the ability to understand the physical processes inside an engine, and understanding *why* every change is made are completely different things.