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Thread: Need help solving surging deceleration and idle

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  1. #1
    Fuel Injected! Roadknee's Avatar
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    Look in your datalog and see if the surge in engine speed coincides with the O2 sensor switching from rich to lean. Some engines with increased overlap just don't handle lean AFR's at low rpm during coasting or light throttle very well. You'll need to adjust the fuel trim parameters, which start with "O2" in your XDF, to reduce the amount of time the O2 sensor output dwells in the lean position.

  2. #2
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    You mean these guys?

    Attachment 9019

    I'm trying to look through some of the other more developed xdf's for comments on what these parameters do exactly. What about the "prop gain" parameters? Would those have an impact in this case?

    Here is a log I took when I first created this bin. Only differences between then and now is the decrease in timing and increase in idle RPM I did this morning.
    Last edited by Chewy1576; 05-13-2015 at 06:00 AM. Reason: Attached data log
    1990 Chevrolet K2500, RCLB, Blueprint 383 TBI (16197427 ECM / 61 lb/hr / 16 psi FP), NV4500, NP241C, 4.10

  3. #3
    Fuel Injected! Roadknee's Avatar
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    Yeah, those are it plus the tables. I've only tuned a few trucks with the 427 PCM and $OD. The parameters are similar to yours, but there are differences. I reached out for help on various message boards without luck. Tuners seem to hold this information pretty close. Maybe you'll have better luck than me.

    The surge you're experiencing doesn't look too bad. I've worked with a pretty hot vortec headed 350 that would surge between 1200 and 1500 rpm when the throttle was cracked in Park. Deceleration under 1,800 rpm wasn't much better. You might try reducing the first three cells of the proportional gain table by 33% and blend the next three cells into the upper cells. The end result would look something like this:

    9.17
    11.78
    18.33
    25.37
    33.99
    43.78
    56.29
    56.29
    56.29

    You might also reduce the High O2 Limit Slow Filter (scalar) from 851 mv to 800 mv.

    These revisions might make it better, worse, or have no affect. Other changes might be needed. I had to experiment with a lot of trial and error to deal with the surge in the 350.

  4. #4
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    I will try those changes in the morning. I was also reading this article (http://www.dynamicefi.com/Tune_Intro2.php) about deceleration and it indicated the injector offset may be too low, especially for engines with different injectors or increased fuel pressure. My application has both, as I am running 80# BBC injectors at 18 psi. I modified the BPW for the larger injectors and injector bias according to the values from Dave W's TBI Calculation spreadsheet, but maybe the bias is too low? I also noticed that the battery voltage in the datalog cycles between 13.3 - 13.8 volts indicating the alternator could be on it's last leg. Increasing the bias means I will need to do more work with the VE table, but that needs to be done anyway. I'm also looking at other injector related parameters in a 7.4L manual transmission bin for comparison to see if I may have left anything out. I just have tomorrow to tinker before I leave town for the weekend, so I may not get to it for a few days.
    1990 Chevrolet K2500, RCLB, Blueprint 383 TBI (16197427 ECM / 61 lb/hr / 16 psi FP), NV4500, NP241C, 4.10

  5. #5
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    Do you have a wideband o2 hooked up?

    Not trying to hijack the thread but im also having similar issues but i have an automatic. I have the 350 injectors running at 20psi on a 5.7L so its a big change from stock and never had the issue before the fuel system overhaul, from what i can remember at least. Now the truck drives and idles fine but on deceleration it acts like DCFO is turned on although iv tried turning it off for testing. At any speed when i let off the throttle, i can feel the fuel shutting off and the wideband confirms that. It starts kicking to max lean, around 22 afr, then back to normal then back to max over and over until i apply throttle then its smooth until i let off again. From what i can see it happens no matter how fast im driving. Even shut off once while slowing down for a light.

  6. #6
    Fuel Injected!
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    Unfortunately, no wideband O2, yet. I was looking at the Innovative Motorsports LC-2 to replace the stock O2 sensor and use the narrowband simulation output to feed the ECM and put in a gauge also, but that will be down the road.

    The suggested O2 parameter changes and a few BPW/injector related tweaks have helped with the surging, but it's not completely gone. There are times where it will decelerate while in gear and transition to idle smoothly, and others where it will surge and jerk when getting to idle. My next change will be increasing the injector offset a little bit more, but that will have to wait until next week. I have attached my last data log from today. This one was for VE corrections.
    1990 Chevrolet K2500, RCLB, Blueprint 383 TBI (16197427 ECM / 61 lb/hr / 16 psi FP), NV4500, NP241C, 4.10

  7. #7
    Fuel Injected! 1BadAction's Avatar
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    Some of these newer OBD1 ECMs are just too sensitive for their own good, they severely jerk the IAC back and forth when they attempt to control the idle, and that is an excellent way to induce a surge in an engine thats not a soft piss weak compression smog motor.

    After going around with this 100 times, what I ended up doing to control mine, was first off, ignore what most people say about setting the minimum air. It is a good start but usually ends up being too low to use as a final setting. Get the engine up to temperature and park the vehicle with it idling. rev the throttle and note how much it drops down below requested idle. It will most likely then recover too hard and start surging.

    Shut the truck off, and turn the idle screw in 1/4 turn. Repeat what you did before and if it only drops about 50rpm before it recovers, you should be good, if its more, turn the screw in another 1/4 turn and try it. It may surge slightly, but that will be learned out after a little bit of driving. When this is close, you can now take it for a drive and start tweaking the settings. You might end up finding that a lot of settings don't even need to be changed. On mine, I did cut the gains back about 25% and turned the overspeed spark corrections OFF. If you are running a BBC throttle body, you'll also want to match the big block IAC position vs airflow percentages, if your ECM uses that particular table.
    Last edited by 1BadAction; 05-14-2015 at 08:51 AM.
    94 Blazer, Turbo'd 350 TBI - DD
    1991 2500 Suburban Adventure truck - 4wd conversion, 4-link F/R, 582ci CNP Big Block with Terminator X EFI backed by a 6L90 and twin stick'd NP205 t-case
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    1979 16' Action Marine/"Johnny Cash" Merc Bridgeport Champ Motor - Metalflake Maniac

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chewy1576 View Post
    Unfortunately, no wideband O2, yet. I was looking at the Innovative Motorsports LC-2 to replace the stock O2 sensor and use the narrowband simulation output to feed the ECM and put in a gauge also, but that will be down the road.
    I personally use the innovate mtx-l and i enjoy it. Its been a long time, but iv read before how some guys find it hard to tune as its not the same as the real thing. My setup is NB on pass side and WB on the driver side. I have used it for about a year and really enjoy it. You can actually use an output wire from the WB and connect it to an egr wire on the ecu and have WB datalogs along with the NB. I tried it the other day and its amazing the amount of data i get now. I just wish i knew what every parameter meant and what each one does and affects what. I also have the 7427

    Originally Posted by HaulnA$$
    .............As for data logging the WB O2, I am using the "Linear EGR Pintle Position" input at pin B16 of the PCM for the 0-5V analog 2
    output of the LM-1. Obviously I am not running an EGR and I have code 32 disabled as well as all EGR enable terms. Bits
    1, "LINEAR EGR/ 0 = EVRV EGR" and 5, "USE L4780 TBL FOR %EGR (Back pressure EGR)" at L400D (AFR Mode Wd 3) must be set, bit 2 does not matter and bit 3 must not be set or the input will not be read. I left bit 4 on but it did not seem to matter.
    The tables at L4700, "DESIRED EGR Vs. RPM & LOAD, (VAC or MAP)" and L4780, "FUEL REDUCTION PCT WITH EGR ON Vs. RPM & VAC", must also zero'ed or the WB O2 input will affect the fueling. I set up the LM-1 and .ads file in TunerPro Rt so the AFR will be displayed properly from 10 to 20 AFR. See attached images.
    It works great and the EGR routines do not affect fueling...........

    Edit: to Chewy1576, are you running a NB o2 at the moment? I unplugged mine and took it for a drive and it drove like a dream and DCFO in fact is working properly, tested by coasting down a big hill in gear. After a few seconds the WB showed fuel shutting off for the duration of the hill and fuel returned to normal once leveling out. Did not surge or drop RPM at any point while off throttle like it does with the NB plugged in. In other words it drove like it was meant to drive.

    If you unplug yours and experience similar results would that mean the o2 tables need more work for both of us? or could there be something else?
    Last edited by 91dime; 05-14-2015 at 06:35 PM.

  9. #9
    Fuel Injected! Roadknee's Avatar
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    Chewy - you can also try reducing the Low O2 Limit Slow Filter. I think it's about 150 in your BIN. Try cutting it in half. This will increase the rate at which fueling changes are made to swing the O2 from lean to rich.

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