ECU not getting vehicle speed good or bad
Moderator: Matt
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- Posts: 36
- Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2008 8:02 am
ECU not getting vehicle speed good or bad
The previous owner of my 240sx disconneted the speed signal wire to the ecu. Will this cause problems with my tuning. Does this effect closed loop operation??
if may affect usage of some of the tables in the ECU
for example fuel cut/recover are dependent on ECU > 20km/h
It could affect O2 sensor operation (check logs to see if O2 sensor is bouncing when in closed loop operation)
Highly advised to reconnect speed signal. Some people disconnect to get around speed limiter ...
for example fuel cut/recover are dependent on ECU > 20km/h
It could affect O2 sensor operation (check logs to see if O2 sensor is bouncing when in closed loop operation)
Highly advised to reconnect speed signal. Some people disconnect to get around speed limiter ...
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- Posts: 36
- Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2008 8:02 am
Some Nissan ECU's will get very upset if the speed signal isn't present. I don't think it affects the tuning so much as the actual running of the engine. They will simply injector cut at a certain point. S13 SR20DE is a classic for this. I do wiring looms for engine conversions, so I've now seen this a few times.
The S13 DE will run fine until it's held wide open (6000rpm+) at high load (3rd gear+) continuously. So most road cars won't even see the problem. But race cars can and do. Once they've run for about 5 seconds under these conditions they will injector cut. Hard.
Others I've seen do this during bench testing are GTiR SR's and I recently tested a Z32 ECU and they do it too. S14 SR20DE's will do the same, but take longer - about 10 seconds. Most will recover once RPM drops below a certain point.
Most SR20DET's don't seem to care.
PL
The S13 DE will run fine until it's held wide open (6000rpm+) at high load (3rd gear+) continuously. So most road cars won't even see the problem. But race cars can and do. Once they've run for about 5 seconds under these conditions they will injector cut. Hard.
Others I've seen do this during bench testing are GTiR SR's and I recently tested a Z32 ECU and they do it too. S14 SR20DE's will do the same, but take longer - about 10 seconds. Most will recover once RPM drops below a certain point.
Most SR20DET's don't seem to care.
PL
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- Posts: 36
- Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2008 8:02 am
agreed and becomes more of an issue once the more power you make, if you get wheelspin the ecu freaks and cuts the injectors.PL wrote:Some Nissan ECU's will get very upset if the speed signal isn't present. I don't think it affects the tuning so much as the actual running of the engine. They will simply injector cut at a certain point. S13 SR20DE is a classic for this. I do wiring looms for engine conversions, so I've now seen this a few times.
The S13 DE will run fine until it's held wide open (6000rpm+) at high load (3rd gear+) continuously. So most road cars won't even see the problem. But race cars can and do. Once they've run for about 5 seconds under these conditions they will injector cut. Hard.
Others I've seen do this during bench testing are GTiR SR's and I recently tested a Z32 ECU and they do it too. S14 SR20DE's will do the same, but take longer - about 10 seconds. Most will recover once RPM drops below a certain point.
Most SR20DET's don't seem to care.
PL
i wired a 26 to a s13 and the car was sweet 365rwkw on the dyno but once it span the wheels it would cut randomly, the customer had no speedo so i did not wire it initially (this was years back) hooked up the vss and bang issue went away.
I've now made up some little oscillator boards that I fit inside the ECU. Very simple - you just gotta find 5V, GND and the speed signal inside the ECU and solder the wires to these points. Then the ECU sees a constant speed signal. Not ideal but it stops the cut. I mainly use these on track cars.
PL
PL
RB20DET's are not quite as bad as what you said about the 25 but they do need the signal or they'll hard cut similar to S13 SR20DE - everything is fine until you hold them wide open at full load for more than a certain time. This time seems to vary between ECU's but usually 5 to 10 seconds.
So some drivers never even notice it. But those that really give their engines a hammering will hit it. That's why it tends to be track cars that have the problems.
PL
So some drivers never even notice it. But those that really give their engines a hammering will hit it. That's why it tends to be track cars that have the problems.
PL