Does anyone have experience or some links for running an EGT on each cylinder on a GtiR or SR20?
I'm seriously considering doing this for my next build.
After 20,000 miles on my last engine running 1.9bar, numerous track days and RR's etc you can see cylinder 1 (timing chain) has had an easier life than cylinder 4 (Dizzy). (I've put the description in case I've mixed up my ends!)
Most sensors are averages for the engine: MAF, WB lambda, knock but with extended use Cylinder head temperatures (CHT) are rising higher at one end of the engine than the other.
The normal way to manage this is to back off ignition or increase fuelling.
I'm thinking for tuning it would be good to have a better understanding of what each cylinder is doing. 4 MAF's or WB lambda is not possible but 4 EGT's is.
With the PFC all I can do is tweak the fuel injector settings to squirt more fuel to the hotter cylinder (All the time) with progressively less until I get back to cylinder 1. If there is an imbalance in CHT across the cylinders then this method would help at high loads/rpm but may give issues at lighter loads.
Alternatively I could just run a more conservative map (boost, ignition, fuel) for more longevity.
Thinking through it, I could do both of these options without bothering with 4 EGT's anyway.
From what I've read on aeroplane sites, trying to perfectly balance EGT's is misleading too and should only be used as a guide. Car sites as ever have mixed opinions.
Anyone else come across this issue?
Jim
I'm seriously considering doing this for my next build.
After 20,000 miles on my last engine running 1.9bar, numerous track days and RR's etc you can see cylinder 1 (timing chain) has had an easier life than cylinder 4 (Dizzy). (I've put the description in case I've mixed up my ends!)
Most sensors are averages for the engine: MAF, WB lambda, knock but with extended use Cylinder head temperatures (CHT) are rising higher at one end of the engine than the other.
The normal way to manage this is to back off ignition or increase fuelling.
I'm thinking for tuning it would be good to have a better understanding of what each cylinder is doing. 4 MAF's or WB lambda is not possible but 4 EGT's is.
With the PFC all I can do is tweak the fuel injector settings to squirt more fuel to the hotter cylinder (All the time) with progressively less until I get back to cylinder 1. If there is an imbalance in CHT across the cylinders then this method would help at high loads/rpm but may give issues at lighter loads.
Alternatively I could just run a more conservative map (boost, ignition, fuel) for more longevity.
Thinking through it, I could do both of these options without bothering with 4 EGT's anyway.
From what I've read on aeroplane sites, trying to perfectly balance EGT's is misleading too and should only be used as a guide. Car sites as ever have mixed opinions.
Anyone else come across this issue?
Jim