Just thinking along in my own little world and i was wondering if nistune was capable of supporting on-board outputs..... just like logic high for X seconds under condition x type of afair
personally i would love to see an output for a simple lght to illuminate when major knock is detected (assuming all goes well with the knock detection part of course)
reason being if say you are out on track you dont want your precious laptop being thrown around and a little warning light just to say "oii you twat! you're gonna blow the engine in a minute!!" would be amazing
Just a thought
does nistune have outputs?
Moderator: Matt
I've thought about it over the last week and memory mapping any spare CPLD outputs to transistors is the way to go
However at this stage I need to get through a lot of stuff added to my list over the last month as I'm getting behind
It would mean new boards, firmware and more testing on top of the current work load so I'm not implementing anything like this in the short term
However at this stage I need to get through a lot of stuff added to my list over the last month as I'm getting behind
It would mean new boards, firmware and more testing on top of the current work load so I'm not implementing anything like this in the short term
not currently. i might have run out of outputs from the CPLD chip on Type 1 board. Type 2 board isnt such an issue since we have lots of pins on there
also you will notice no more physical space on the board itself to fit any more components. ECU spare space has been a major design limitation from the start of the project. We had tons of space on Z31/R31 ECUs with our earlier Rev1/2 boards but Rev3 got shrunk to fit perfectly inside CA18 ECUs which we determined to be one of the major ones used
also you will notice no more physical space on the board itself to fit any more components. ECU spare space has been a major design limitation from the start of the project. We had tons of space on Z31/R31 ECUs with our earlier Rev1/2 boards but Rev3 got shrunk to fit perfectly inside CA18 ECUs which we determined to be one of the major ones used