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Tech Talk Technical Discussion About The Nissan 240SX and Nissan Z Cars |
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#1 |
Zilvia Member
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AFR issues. Please help.
Setup:
Sr20det with FMIC T25 Greddy type rs bov(recirculated after the maf, before the turbo) MBC set to 10psi Innovative wideband: Idle/crusing at 14.2 afr WOT 11-12 AFR When I coast and I let my rpms drop, the afr shoots to 22. Which is a lean condition. It will either come back to 14 on it's own but sometimes afr's will stay that way until i either put it back in gear or brake. I've also noticed when I parked and I rev as soon as my rpms hit about 2k rpm the afr's shoot up to 22 afr but when it returns to idle it will be back to 14afr. I hope I am making sense. |
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#2 |
Zilvia Member
![]() Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Florida
Age: 37
Posts: 174
Trader Rating: (1)
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When I got my car dyno tuned my tuner was primarily concerned with my WOT afr. I asked him about my coasting and idle and he said its not a concern. Hope that helps.
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#3 |
Zilvia Member
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my friend had an issue with PLX device wideband "sticking" like how you described. it turns out the soldering on the circuit board was bad and it needed resoldering. PLX fixed it for him.
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#4 |
Leaky Injector
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that's standard on almost all cars.
Off-throttle fuel cut.Think of it this way. If RPM > 1500, Throttle <5% there's a good chance your coasting and there's no point in burning gas. So the ECU cuts fuel. If your revving it, soon as you release the gas pedal the fuel cut will occur once again going to 22 full lean/fuel cut. So it's designed to save gas by not burning it when you don't need it. |
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#5 |
Zilvia Member
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Thanks for all your replies. The reason why I am concerned is because it was not doing this before but I see your point. I know when I had my blitz bov which wasn't recirculated my afr was real rich.
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#6 |
Zilvia Member
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to add to "krazydriver"'s comment and my own, yes it is normal for any car to hit a lean spot as you let go of the pedal after a rev. but yeah if the wideband AFR is taking time to come back from a lean spike because you let go of your throttle quickly, your wideband could be sticking. but yes the leanspot itself is normal.
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#8 |
Leaky Injector
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Read my first post. I've got an lc-1 it does the same thing, that's how the car runs.
The wideband would not be sticking. The AFR will read full lean until usually < 1500 RPM. At this point fueling is required for proper idle/low speed afr. Downshifting would increase RPM which would make the ECU increase fueling because the engine is accelerating. Braking would affect load/decelleration on the engine resulting in a change to the map/maf reading which would affect what the ECU does for fueling. In other words, your car is fine, your wideband is fine, and there is nothing to worry about. |
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