Help me understand my MAP readings
Posted: Sat Dec 27, 2008 3:57 pm
I've made some observations recently that I don't quite understand.
First, a question... I'm pulling my MAP input from the vacuum source on my throttle body, which comes from just past the throttle plate in the intake tract. Is this an accurate and true vacuum source, or should I drill a MAP source directly into the intake manifold, closer to the head? The reason I ask is that I can't get the engine to idle with less than 60-65 kPa, and it doesn't even dip below about 40 kPa in a lift-throttle situation. I do have a somewhat lumpy cam, but it just doesn't seem quite right.
Now, what's happening that I can't make sense of:
Acceleration at full-throttle gives ~100 kPa, which should read the appropriate 100 kPa for whatever the RPM is. Fair enough. The car happens to run like crap in this situation, as if it's starved for fuel.
The weird part is that if I give it about 3/4 throttle (which is actually 60% by my datalog), I see ~100kPa... the difference is that in this situation, the car pulls nicely.
My seat-of-the-pants (sorry, the WBO2 is still inop) concludes from these two observations that the car is getting more air at full throttle than at 3/4 throttle, and thus needs more fuel.
The part that I don't understand is that if the kPa is the same at 3/4 throttle and full throttle... how can the MS know to give more fuel at full throttle?
First, a question... I'm pulling my MAP input from the vacuum source on my throttle body, which comes from just past the throttle plate in the intake tract. Is this an accurate and true vacuum source, or should I drill a MAP source directly into the intake manifold, closer to the head? The reason I ask is that I can't get the engine to idle with less than 60-65 kPa, and it doesn't even dip below about 40 kPa in a lift-throttle situation. I do have a somewhat lumpy cam, but it just doesn't seem quite right.
Now, what's happening that I can't make sense of:
Acceleration at full-throttle gives ~100 kPa, which should read the appropriate 100 kPa for whatever the RPM is. Fair enough. The car happens to run like crap in this situation, as if it's starved for fuel.
The weird part is that if I give it about 3/4 throttle (which is actually 60% by my datalog), I see ~100kPa... the difference is that in this situation, the car pulls nicely.
My seat-of-the-pants (sorry, the WBO2 is still inop) concludes from these two observations that the car is getting more air at full throttle than at 3/4 throttle, and thus needs more fuel.
The part that I don't understand is that if the kPa is the same at 3/4 throttle and full throttle... how can the MS know to give more fuel at full throttle?