- 20,145
- Australia
- VIPERGTS01
sorry. i didnt realize there was one active. i thought everybody was just in conversation.
Nevermind.
sorry. i didnt realize there was one active. i thought everybody was just in conversation.
There really isn't any benefit to retarding ignition, it's entirely a safety measure.
And the oscillations are called....crosscounts. Thats what I was looking for.The ECU does monitor the air fuel ratio using the oxygen sensor voltage.
My understanding of what you are getting at with the second part of that question: The narrow band oxygen sensors in cars don't give a good indication of what the air fuel ratio is, just whether it is rich or lean. So the ECU adds fuel when it's lean and takes it away when it's rich... the result is that the air fuel ratio oscillates between slightly rich and slightly lean. A bad oxygen sensor can begin to react slowly to changes in the air fuel ratio, meaning those oscillations become longer than they should be. The ECU does not use the oscillation in voltage to tell if the mixture is rich or lean, but it can be used to detect a bad oxygen sensor.
That's my understanding of it anyway.
Opendriver, are you saying that this is direct-drive?
(Is it some sort of entry from the "What can you Hemi" contest?)
A dirt sprint car. Maybe?
Edit: Got called for a job tomorrow, so if I'm right, let Skip go, since he "skipped' his before. . . .