Track tuning
#1
Burning Brakes
Thread Starter
Track tuning
So I am going to RA road course and was thinking of doing some on track tuning. Has anyone done this? The car is not a track only car. I have no MAF so would just tune the VE table using WB and lambda error. I would disable fuel trims but I obviously don't want to disable PE. Maybe I'll just adjust my PE throttle so I'm not always in PE or does it matter? Any advice? Thanks
Last edited by edge04; 08-06-2014 at 10:50 PM.
#2
Drifting
Member Since: Jan 2005
Location: Tucson Arizona
Posts: 1,827
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St. Jude Donor '08
With no information on your car in your profile, you would have to provide more information on your ECM type and modifications to get one of the experienced tuners on this forum to get involved. Several have already read your thread without responding.
#3
Burning Brakes
Thread Starter
Guess I was just wondering if anyone has ever done track tuning. Of course a load bearing dyno is best but I would think a track would be 2nd best.
So my question is if I plan on doing track tuning and only tune using a wideband and lambda error with no MAF (SDOL only) should I set PE to enable earlier than normal street driving?
FI LS2, E38-2 bar SD COS using HPT. No meth yet.
thanks
So my question is if I plan on doing track tuning and only tune using a wideband and lambda error with no MAF (SDOL only) should I set PE to enable earlier than normal street driving?
FI LS2, E38-2 bar SD COS using HPT. No meth yet.
thanks
#4
You'll have almost no steady state data from the track. You will have both wall film and base VE effects happening simultaneously, making it difficult to narrow any issues down to one or the other. I have seen a lot of jacked up of VE maps that resulted from this type of "tuning". The cost for a couple hours on a good load bearing dyno is about the same as most track days and will get you the opportunity to collect far more useful data.
If the car was properly calibrated ahead of time on the dyno, you often don't need to do anything on track to make it run right.
If the car was properly calibrated ahead of time on the dyno, you often don't need to do anything on track to make it run right.