tut wrote:The ECU should really always be re-mapped to the final Honda conversion in the car, both from the safety point of view of having the correct AFR, and also maximising the hp/tq output, it is mapped for a standard Civic Type-R, not an Elise configuration with a different exhaust manifold, exhaust system, and air filter.
You can easily lose 20hp over the Hondata mapped ECU as I found out on N1, BLiNK used the standard ECU whereas the other Convertors used the Hondata for which they had the equipment to re-map. There is no point in spending £10K on the conversion then not finishing it off properly for the sake of a couple of hundred.
tut
Unless you don't care about the 20BHP (which I don't) and you prefer the peace of mind that the factory calibration brings (cold start, idle control, emissions, blah blah blah). Of course it may be that the Hondata preserves all that normal running stuff and only messes with fuelling at higher engine speeds ... in which case fair enough.
I don't think the engine will run lean in normal operation (because the lambda sensor will be used to trim fuelling to match airflow - we're only talking a few percent here).
I don't know anything about the Honda ECU, but I imagine on wide open throttle it will run open loop, and I agree in that case it might run lean if the new exhaust manifold really does work a lot better than the normal CTR manifold, though it might still apply fuel trims.
I plan to get mine rolling road tested at some point in the not too distant future - I want to do a few more miles first to make sure the ECU has had time to learn the trims.
I'll be sure to get them to check the fuelling at around 80mph in 6th around the 100BHP output level - if it's not running lean then, you'll be fine on cruise IMHO.
Cheers,
Robin