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09-23-2008, 04:00 PM
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Help! Experienced Accel Gen 6 tuners.
Just got my twin turbo 355 Chevelle. But I am at high altitude (5500 ft.) and I need to tune it. I can plug it into the laptop, run the program... But I know nothing about tuning. Is there anyone that is reputable that might get on the phone with me and tune this thing over the phone, off my laptop? Or even just dial into my laptop directly and tune it?
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Sikness: '64 Malibu, Twin Turbo (had to sell  )
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09-23-2008, 04:23 PM
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I haven't dealt with a Gen 6, but at 5500 feet you will probably need to richen the entire map about 30-35% and also add a several of degrees of timing in all the cruise areas to make up for lost combustion efficiency. It will probably want a bit more timing under boost.
I know it seems counter-intuitive to richen the map as the car is now at a higher altitude; common sense and carb experience says that as altitude goes up air density decreases and thus the mixture gets richer and you need to lean it out.
However, with an ECU that doesn't have barometric pressure compensation such as your Gen 6, the prevailing "standard" pressure at startup will drop from ~100 kPa at sea level (where the car was) to probably about 80-85 kPa at 5500'; this moves the tune into a lighter load and thus leaner area of the tune than it would be at sea level so the car will be lean all the time.
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1969 Chevelle
Old setup: Procharged/intercooled/EFI 353 SBC, TKO, ATS/SPC/Global West suspension, C6 brakes & hydroboost.
In progress: LS2, 3.0 Whipple, T56 Magnum, torque arm & watts link, Wilwood Aero6/4 brakes, Mk60 ABS, Vaporworx, floater 9" rear, etc.
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09-25-2008, 04:58 AM
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I am going to attempt this. You're not the first to tell me about richening it up. It still is hard to get that thru my thick skull, doesn't seem to make sense. But I trust you're experience, so that's what I'm going to try and do. Thanks!
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Sikness: '64 Malibu, Twin Turbo (had to sell  )
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09-25-2008, 07:14 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swchopper
I am going to attempt this. You're not the first to tell me about richening it up. It still is hard to get that thru my thick skull, doesn't seem to make sense. But I trust you're experience, so that's what I'm going to try and do. Thanks! 
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you are correct, it seems opposite of what your brain would tell you. But it is true, at least with the aftermarket speed density systems like Accel, BigStuff 3, FAST, etc.
I had to pull over on the way to Hot August Nights with the Chevelle and richen the entire fuel map 30%. It was dead lean at about 5000 ft altitude. After I richened the map I also allowed minus and plus 25% of fuel adding/subtracting through the computer, and the same high altitude tune ran perfect down at sea level. That is how a local tuner gets them to run at altitude and sea level. By the way, mine is Bigstuff 3 with altitude compensation, but it won't work at higher elevations, maybe good to 2500-3000' feet at best.
Jody
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09-27-2008, 08:25 AM
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Ecu 882= Baro + Map
My EMS, ECU-882C-x, has the MAP AND BAROmetric sensors (two seperate) mounted onto the circuit board.
"BOTH 100% FULL TIME"
The "quest" from the coast to Lake Tahoe (9000') is quite common for, boats, buggies, and cars.
What was found:
The fuel pressure regulator's "baro" reference point determined the correction slope direction.
When the regulator was referenced to manifold pressure,
the slope direction would allow for LESS of the "fuel multiplier" object.
When the regulator was referenced to atmosphere (air),
the slope direction would allow for MORE of the "fuel multipier" object.
Lance
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09-27-2008, 12:20 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swchopper
Just got my twin turbo 355 Chevelle. But I am at high altitude (5500 ft.) and I need to tune it. I can plug it into the laptop, run the program... But I know nothing about tuning. Is there anyone that is reputable that might get on the phone with me and tune this thing over the phone, off my laptop? Or even just dial into my laptop directly and tune it?
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Where are you located? I know a guy who has tuned a few supercharged gen 6 setups.
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09-27-2008, 02:31 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pantera EFI
My EMS, ECU-882C-x, has the MAP AND BAROmetric sensors (two seperate) mounted onto the circuit board.
"BOTH 100% FULL TIME"
The "quest" from the coast to Lake Tahoe (9000') is quite common for, boats, buggies, and cars.
What was found:
The fuel pressure regulator's "baro" reference point determined the correction slope direction.
When the regulator was referenced to manifold pressure,
the slope direction would allow for LESS of the "fuel multiplier" object.
When the regulator was referenced to atmosphere (air),
the slope direction would allow for MORE of the "fuel multipier" object.
Lance
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Agreed Lance, I've made this observation as well. How the FPR is referenced does play into the necessary fueling corrections. I neglected to ask or mention the effects of FPR reference point in my old post.
I just find it rather sad that most of the "mainstream" boxes (including my older FAST) have no barometric compensation capability... because real world cars seldom drive at a steady altitude all the time and how a feature this critical to "jump in and go" capability could have been overlooked or omitted is a HUGE oversight!
In a relatively "flat" state like Missouri the lack of barometric compensation is not a huge problem, but in my case I can go from sea level to 9000' over a 2.5 hour drive and it can be a real issue!
__________________
1969 Chevelle
Old setup: Procharged/intercooled/EFI 353 SBC, TKO, ATS/SPC/Global West suspension, C6 brakes & hydroboost.
In progress: LS2, 3.0 Whipple, T56 Magnum, torque arm & watts link, Wilwood Aero6/4 brakes, Mk60 ABS, Vaporworx, floater 9" rear, etc.
Last edited by Blown353; 09-27-2008 at 02:34 PM.
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10-04-2008, 04:10 AM
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Now you are talking in foreign languages  I did find a tuner for the Gen VI. It is a temporary fix. But I also do have quite a range of altitudes with what I do. So I'm putting in a new FAST system in 2 weeks! It looks like this may be the start of what I thought was NOT going to be a project car. But this website doesn't help. I keep finding things I want to "spruce up" or just flat out change!
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Sikness: '64 Malibu, Twin Turbo (had to sell  )
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10-04-2008, 05:13 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swchopper
Now you are talking in foreign languages  I did find a tuner for the Gen VI. It is a temporary fix. But I also do have quite a range of altitudes with what I do. So I'm putting in a new FAST system in 2 weeks! It looks like this may be the start of what I thought was NOT going to be a project car. But this website doesn't help. I keep finding things I want to "spruce up" or just flat out change!
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sell your computer and enjoy your car......  if not you will end up doing a complete frame-off "spruce up" in no time at all... LOL
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Elwood:We're 105 miles from Chicago, we have a full tank of gas, half pack of cigarettes, it's dark out and we're wearing sunglasses.
Jake: Hit it.
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10-04-2008, 04:51 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by swchopper
Now you are talking in foreign languages  I did find a tuner for the Gen VI. It is a temporary fix. But I also do have quite a range of altitudes with what I do. So I'm putting in a new FAST system in 2 weeks! It looks like this may be the start of what I thought was NOT going to be a project car. But this website doesn't help. I keep finding things I want to "spruce up" or just flat out change!
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Don't bother with the new FAST XFI if you're looking for a step up when it comes to better performance over changing altitudes... because the XFI doesn't have true real time barometric compensation feature either and it still won't run right for your particular application if you drive the car to another altitude without a power cycle! The XFI firmware pseudo-comps for altitude with a "load indexed" speed-density strategy in their new firmware. The problem is it uses the main MAP sensor and thus can only update the barometric parameters during key-on startup and WOT-- which works OK with naturally aspirated setups as it can read the WOT MAP value every time you floor it and use that for the new barometric value but with your turbos the feature is rather ineffective to say the least because at WOT it doesn't see the true prevailing barometric conditions. Thus, for your forced induction application to have it refresh the barometric value requires you to shut the car off and then restart so it can read the key-off MAP value to get the barometric conditions. It's better than no correction at all like your Gen VI but still a pain in the butt as you have to pull over, shut the car off, and then restart it.
If you drive the car over a wide range of altitudes then forget the FAST XFI, Accel Gen VII, and the other boxes that get most of the advertising time; none of them treat this condition properly!
I've never used one of Lance's 882C boxes but I do like the specs & capabilities and I'm considering upgrading my ECU to one of his; Lance uses a separate MAP sensor to get the barometric conditions (i.e. altitude) so it can comp for weather/altitude changes in real time without a key-off reset.
__________________
1969 Chevelle
Old setup: Procharged/intercooled/EFI 353 SBC, TKO, ATS/SPC/Global West suspension, C6 brakes & hydroboost.
In progress: LS2, 3.0 Whipple, T56 Magnum, torque arm & watts link, Wilwood Aero6/4 brakes, Mk60 ABS, Vaporworx, floater 9" rear, etc.
Last edited by Blown353; 10-04-2008 at 04:59 PM.
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