Changes to Injector Offset in LT 1 Edit
Recently I upgraded to 36# injectors and made the change in LT1 edit but noticed that it did not change my injector constant. They are still at the stock settings.
Is there a formula for adjusting these and can someone provide me that formula if it exists?
Any guidance is appreciated.
Thanks
Is there a formula for adjusting these and can someone provide me that formula if it exists?
Any guidance is appreciated.
Thanks
Thanks for responding Dr. Mudge.
I am trying to adjust the constant for the Blue Tip 36# injectors (they are not SVO). The injector constant in one of the setting in LT1 edit that tells the the injector how long to stay open at various Ms pulse width's.
The constants in my computer are still at the stock settings and since my injectors flow more (36# vs 24# (stock)). I would like to have them only open the necessary amount of time.
I have tried to adjust the other items that could affect my richness issue without any success and believe that the 36# injector should not be open as long as the stock injector was to flow the same amount of fuel under normal driving conditions.
I'm not looking to change the pressure, but just the time that the injector opens.
Thanks
Ed M.
[This message has been edited by White Tiger (edited July 26, 2002).]
I am trying to adjust the constant for the Blue Tip 36# injectors (they are not SVO). The injector constant in one of the setting in LT1 edit that tells the the injector how long to stay open at various Ms pulse width's.
The constants in my computer are still at the stock settings and since my injectors flow more (36# vs 24# (stock)). I would like to have them only open the necessary amount of time.
I have tried to adjust the other items that could affect my richness issue without any success and believe that the 36# injector should not be open as long as the stock injector was to flow the same amount of fuel under normal driving conditions.
I'm not looking to change the pressure, but just the time that the injector opens.
Thanks
Ed M.
[This message has been edited by White Tiger (edited July 26, 2002).]
LT1 editor
open file
edit ... fuel
there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly.
Worked for me with SVO 30# injectors
LWM
------------------
95 A4, SLP catback, KBDD sfc, airfoil, Vortech S-trim, 30# SVO injectors, Autometer electric FP guage, boost guage, Hotchkis STB, AS&M headers, AFPR, Vortech Aftercooler, 3.125" blower pulley, 7" crank pulley, Vigilante 2,800 stall, MSD 6 BTM, SLP 35mm front bar, SLP 21mm rear bar, LT-1 editor ...
, 437hp at the wheels. --- members.shaw.ca/mackenzl/LWMsZ-28/LWMsZ-28.html ... 01 vert in the making ...
open file
edit ... fuel
there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly.
Worked for me with SVO 30# injectors
LWM
------------------
95 A4, SLP catback, KBDD sfc, airfoil, Vortech S-trim, 30# SVO injectors, Autometer electric FP guage, boost guage, Hotchkis STB, AS&M headers, AFPR, Vortech Aftercooler, 3.125" blower pulley, 7" crank pulley, Vigilante 2,800 stall, MSD 6 BTM, SLP 35mm front bar, SLP 21mm rear bar, LT-1 editor ...
, 437hp at the wheels. --- members.shaw.ca/mackenzl/LWMsZ-28/LWMsZ-28.html ... 01 vert in the making ...
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by LWM:
LT1 editor
open file
edit ... fuel
there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly.
Worked for me with SVO 30# injectors
LWM
</font>
LT1 editor
open file
edit ... fuel
there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly.
Worked for me with SVO 30# injectors
LWM
</font>
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by LWM:
....there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly. LWM
</font>
....there is a box on that page with injector size on it. Tick the lbs/hr circle and then enter your injector size ... save the file and then up load it.
If you find you are excessively rich or lean, then you can adjust the injector size accordingly. LWM
</font>
The car is heavily modded, and even negative numbers in the PEvsRPM table couldn't bring me leaner. Really I'm interested in finding the formula for correcting the injector constant throughout the volt range.
Thanks
[This message has been edited by White Tiger (edited July 30, 2002).]
How about trying this link.
http://carprogrammer.com/Z28/PCM/Injector/injectors.htm
Not a formula, just a table, but it might set you in the right direction.
From what I've seen in my travells, with these MAF enabled cars, the greatest tuning tools are the "injector size" and the PE table.
Hope this helps
LWM
------------------
95 A4, SLP catback, KBDD sfc, airfoil, Vortech S-trim, 30# SVO injectors, Autometer electric FP guage, boost guage, Hotchkis STB, AS&M headers, AFPR, Vortech Aftercooler, 3.125" blower pulley, 7" crank pulley, Vigilante 2,800 stall, MSD 6 BTM, SLP 35mm front bar, SLP 21mm rear bar, LT-1 editor ...
, 437hp at the wheels. --- members.shaw.ca/mackenzl/LWMsZ-28/LWMsZ-28.html ... 01 vert in the making ...
http://carprogrammer.com/Z28/PCM/Injector/injectors.htm
Not a formula, just a table, but it might set you in the right direction.
From what I've seen in my travells, with these MAF enabled cars, the greatest tuning tools are the "injector size" and the PE table.
Hope this helps
LWM
------------------
95 A4, SLP catback, KBDD sfc, airfoil, Vortech S-trim, 30# SVO injectors, Autometer electric FP guage, boost guage, Hotchkis STB, AS&M headers, AFPR, Vortech Aftercooler, 3.125" blower pulley, 7" crank pulley, Vigilante 2,800 stall, MSD 6 BTM, SLP 35mm front bar, SLP 21mm rear bar, LT-1 editor ...
, 437hp at the wheels. --- members.shaw.ca/mackenzl/LWMsZ-28/LWMsZ-28.html ... 01 vert in the making ...
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by iwon:
but thats not the correct and safe way to do
</font>
but thats not the correct and safe way to do
</font>
Now if your car is running correctly and all of a sudden is rich or lean you dont want to correct by changing the constant...you need to find the real problem.
------------------
Greg
95 Z28 conv M6
Georgia F-Body Association
Stage 1 heads, 1.6rr, Meziere WP
lt4 hot cam,lt4 timing chain kit,52mm TB,
Hooker Headers, Pro 5 shifter,3.73s,
NX 150 progressive,
Self-tuned via Tunercat
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by gb95zconv:
Wrong...its both correct and safe when changing injectors...especially when going with a different make such as svo . Different makes are rated at different fuel pressures and that must be compensated for. As long as you are rich or lean across the board the fuel inj constant is a good way to tune.
Now if your car is running correctly and all of a sudden is rich or lean you dont want to correct by changing the constant...you need to find the real problem.
</font>
Wrong...its both correct and safe when changing injectors...especially when going with a different make such as svo . Different makes are rated at different fuel pressures and that must be compensated for. As long as you are rich or lean across the board the fuel inj constant is a good way to tune.
Now if your car is running correctly and all of a sudden is rich or lean you dont want to correct by changing the constant...you need to find the real problem.
</font>
For example, my cars "main" injecotrs are 50lb and after a lot of tuning I ended up with the injector constant at 42lb. The tune is based on extensive, fully instrumented dyno runs and it is spot on.
Rich Krause
------------------
'95 Z-28 383 with Vortech, nitrous, etc.
"1FASTZ28"
Thanks for the info!
Yes, my car is rich across the board, thus that is why I was looking for the constants.
LWM...thanks for the link, this should help.
One more question, the 36# injectors I have are Blue Tips, does anyone know how that compares to the SVO table?
Thanks
Ed M.
Yes, my car is rich across the board, thus that is why I was looking for the constants.
LWM...thanks for the link, this should help.
One more question, the 36# injectors I have are Blue Tips, does anyone know how that compares to the SVO table?
Thanks
Ed M.
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by gb95zconv:
Wrong...its both correct and safe when changing injectors...especially when going with a different make such as svo . Different makes are rated at different fuel pressures and that must be compensated for. As long as you are rich or lean across the board the fuel inj constant is a good way to tune.
Now if your car is running correctly and all of a sudden is rich or lean you dont want to correct by changing the constant...you need to find the real problem.
</font>
Wrong...its both correct and safe when changing injectors...especially when going with a different make such as svo . Different makes are rated at different fuel pressures and that must be compensated for. As long as you are rich or lean across the board the fuel inj constant is a good way to tune.
Now if your car is running correctly and all of a sudden is rich or lean you dont want to correct by changing the constant...you need to find the real problem.
</font>
The injector offsets vs voltage is the better table to tweak, not the contant. For the most part, the leg work has already been done for you with regard to the offsets of aftermarket injs.
-CAL
<font face="Verdana, Arial" size="2">Originally posted by Luna:
Use the pressure differential formula to produce the correct inj constant.
The injector offsets vs voltage is the better table to tweak, not the contant. For the most part, the leg work has already been done for you with regard to the offsets of aftermarket injs.
-CAL
</font>
Use the pressure differential formula to produce the correct inj constant.
The injector offsets vs voltage is the better table to tweak, not the contant. For the most part, the leg work has already been done for you with regard to the offsets of aftermarket injs.
-CAL
</font>
Unfortunately mine are the 36# Blue tip injectors (obtained from the old Modern Muscle in Mich) and I don't know how the SVO's compare and what adjustment, if any I would need to make to the inj offset vs voltage table for the Blue tip vs SVO type.
Thanks
Ed M.
1995 Z28
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