Mikie711 wrote:Sorry, but you need to get that on a rolling road or re-map it live while someone drives. Both the ignition and fueling 3d map are miles out. On the fueling the 3500 speed site is less than everything around it as is the 5000.
There is often a torque dip at "lower" engine speeds (remember this is a higher revving engine) and so there is often a corresponding fuelling dip.
The ignition map is all over the place, it should be much smoother transition into advance especially in the mid range. And why would you need huge advance at light throttle.
Again, this is common, although usually only seen at lower speed sites, it is the equivalent of vacuum advance on an old distributor. You need more advance when there is less oxygen, I believe. Also it is common to map in a lot of advance below the idle speed to bump the engine out of stall back into idle.
If your engine is essentially a 190 spec motor then email emerald for a new base map, it will be much closer to what you need and probably a better starting point for getting it mapped properly.
Provided your fuel pump, fuel pressure regulator and injectors are standard, this is OK approach. Otherwise the fuelling will be the right shape, but the wrong actual numbers and you would need to rescale the injector pulse widths to compensate for the difference in fuel flow rate. Also the idle tends to be more individual as the amount of fuel you have to pour into an engine like this at idle is extremely sensitive to intake air speed which in turn is dependent on all sorts of mechanical features of the intake path. At wide open throttle it's more predictable for a given setup (or at least less different between engines).
And you can't rely on a narrow band sensors for accurate Lambda readings
You CAN rely on narrow band lambda if all you want to know is whether it is rich or lean - they are very accurate at achieving this. It's not possible to map the engine this way, though, but it is possible to pass the MOT. If your engine mapper has a good lambda sensor to set it all up and you don't want to run adaptive fuelling (why would you) then a narrow band is perfectly OK for it's one task which is to pass the MOT.
Note that whilst all Emerald K6 maps have AFR target maps, most of them don't have it enabled - so Ferg, if you want to know whether or not your AFR map is meaningful, you need to look at the settings pages to see whether adaptive fuelling is enabled.
Cheers,
Robin