David Gentleman wrote:Turn the key, drive the bloody thing...
Says him
I've tried turning the key ...........nothing Good job I've got homestart
Moderators: eastlmark, BIG_MVS, phildini, Test Moderator, Alpineandy
Club Member
7463
Wed Apr 14, 2004 7:25 pm
London
In that case for the GTA it's back to 66 'theoretical' teeth in a 'full' flywheel @ 5.4545 degrees per tooth.
Does the sensor trigger on the leading edge or the trailing edge?
If the sensor triggered on the trailing edge of the large tooth (which would be teeth 20 and 21 in a sequence if the gap was machined out) then there is 10.9 degrees before the sensor would pick up the trailing edge of the next tooth (tooth 1 in the next sequence). Tooth 22 would then be considered the missing tooth.
If there are three repeat sequences at 120 degree intervals then the untriggered interval = 120 - 10.9 = 109.1 degrees
108 is pretty close to 109.1 so presumably that would still work?
Has anyone tried 109 degrees in the adaptronic?
Non Member
1514
Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:24 am
Nr Chippenham, Wiltshire
Non Member
3474
Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
Stunned Monkey wrote:
For example - peterg's config states that the engine has 6 cylinder and that there are 20 teeth per period. Now this is where the Adaptronic manual fails us slightly because what's not clear is whether it wants to know how many teeth there would be if they were all there (like a 36/1 means 35 teeth and one missing, each tooth equals 10 degrees), or now many ACTUAL teeth there are. So I would like to try peterg's config with the setting saying 22 teeth per period
)
Non Member
1514
Tue Apr 12, 2005 12:24 am
Nr Chippenham, Wiltshire
David Gentleman wrote:
Which means you can't tell the ecu with the wizard that there are 22 teeth in the wizard (plus fat/gap), as we know 100% that each tooth on the Renault flywheel is 5.45 degrees apart, and if you work it out and tell there ecu there is 22 PLUS the missing/fat tooth, then this won't be this angle, and therefore is incorrect.
{/quote]
But you can tell it there are 66 teeth on a crank when in reality there are 63 with 3 missing....
The 108 is NOTHING to do with the angle of TDC after the first reset point. If you look in the software in the wizard it asks for the 'angle BTDC of the first tooth after 'reset' - but we have set the software to look at periods only, not full crank rotations (period is the series of teeth), so the BTDC bit it irrelevant.
Sorry you've completely lost me here. The software NEEDS to know where the TDC point is in relation to the reset point, that's what the reset point is FOR! And you can measure the reference yourself on a bench! And yes I know we're only dealing with periods in peterg's config, but given that we've told the ECU it's got 6 cylinders, it'll work out for itself that these 20 teeth plus 2 missing or 22 incl 2 missing accounts for 120 degrees of crank rotation.
The 108 is simply the point on the flywheel that missing tooth trigger occurs, nothing to do with reference to TDC on the engine.
Non Member
3474
Thu Apr 15, 2004 8:10 am
Colchester, Essex
Stunned Monkey wrote:
But you can tell it there are 66 teeth on a crank when in reality there are 63 with 3 missing....
Sorry you've completely lost me here. The software NEEDS to know where the TDC point is in relation to the reset point, that's what the reset point is FOR! And you can measure the reference yourself on a bench! And yes I know we're only dealing with periods in peterg's config, but given that we've told the ECU it's got 6 cylinders, it'll work out for itself that these 20 teeth plus 2 missing or 22 incl 2 missing accounts for 120 degrees of crank rotation.
So it's a completely unitless measurement of nothing at all really.... is what you're saying. So why have it at all? Why not just have 66 teeth on the flywheel, Or for that matter, why not just read the ring gear teeth?
so we're back to the orignal quesiton: Where's the 108 figure come from?
Non Member
1407
Fri Apr 16, 2004 4:50 pm
Kent
Non Member
10431
Fri May 28, 2004 11:58 am
Derbyshire
Non Member
302
Sat Apr 24, 2004 12:23 am
Penicuik, Scotland
( for those who might want to learn here, having one missing tooth per engine rev gives the ECU enough information to know which cylinder is which - vital if you want to run coil packs/wasted spark. It does not need to know which cylinder is which if you run a distributor and batch fired injection - as we are here, so having a missing tooth for each cylinder pair is fine)
Non Member
5602
Thu Apr 15, 2004 12:33 pm
Fleet, Hampshire
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 211 guests