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Engine Tech Technical discussion related to all relevant engines such as KA, SR, RB, CA, 2JZ , L24/26/28, VG, VQ, and LSx series. |
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04-14-2014, 08:52 PM | #31 |
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and now tomei's back ordered till the end of may on cams and frsport had the one i need and i called back and it was already sold....what are the chances... so now im on the search otherwise a long shitty down time again
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04-14-2014, 10:38 PM | #32 |
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Are you revving higher than 7500rpm? If not then the turbo isn't going to have any effect on the hydrolic lifter's performance. That is really just an rpm issue, and i've only heard of the aem rev limiter being the one that tends to throw rocker arms due to the gain/how fast it hits the limiter. And like I said, with dual guides the rocker cannot throw, so the solid lifter has no benefit. Might as well put rocker arm stoppers on it as well.
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04-16-2014, 02:35 AM | #33 | |
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04-23-2014, 11:49 AM | #34 |
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so got the car tuned put down about 450-470whp on the dyno at 8500rpms took it out to the track yesterday for some testing everything was running perfect until my stupid clutch fan broke and messed up my water pump and ended the day gunna go out again on thursday so far so good with the setup.....finally
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04-23-2014, 12:11 PM | #35 |
solid lifters are good for high rpm. The hydraulic lifters are noisy when they get old. Street vs race take your pick. Have you already installed your guides? what size did you end up going with?
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04-23-2014, 02:10 PM | #36 |
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ya installed the dual guides along with tomei solid 260 intake cam and 270 exhaust cam just because thats all i could get my hands on since tomei is back ordered about a month on cams but pretty happy with the 260/270 alittle more pick up
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04-23-2014, 06:49 PM | #37 | |
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oem Guide shims are all the same thickness. |
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04-24-2014, 04:20 PM | #39 |
Leaky Injector
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What springs did you go with?
All R.A.S. will do the same thing, don't waste time with them. Doesn't matter the brand. I took mine and sat on the rev limiter at 8k for 4 minutes, almost straight, just TONS of rev limiter. I'm running tomei dual springs and ti retainers. OEM hydro lifters, factory shims and guides, on oversized valves (light ferrea and BC ones [don't ask why they're mismatched, I don't want to talk about it hahaha]) and I'm running 270 tomei pro cams. 12.5mm lift? (could be wrong it's from memory) What cams are you running with what springs? Every spring has a resonance, and at certain RPMs this can resonate "just right" to prevent the spring from functioning normally, there's also spring bind. This is where dual valve springs are great because it staggers the "efficiency" ranges, which makes it so there's always an effective spring. Be careful with too heavy of springs also, as at idle with too stiff of spring you can start burning cams with an idle set too low. |
04-24-2014, 06:11 PM | #40 |
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Camp ramp has a lot to do with it as well. JWT cams can run rev limiter all day on a stock sr with no problem, BC not so much say goodbye to rocker arms without dual guides or upgrades lol.
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04-25-2014, 12:25 PM | #41 | |
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04-25-2014, 01:49 PM | #42 |
Zilvia FREAK!
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Will all that money on the headwork. A stock VVL head swap would have been a better move.
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03-24-2015, 01:26 PM | #44 |
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So how has it been working out for you? Next move for me is installing oem hydo lifters from a roller-rocker sr20de. They have larger oil ports and perform like solid lifters at high rpm, but are still quiet at low rpm and require no maintenance or periodic measurements like solid lifter kits.
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03-24-2015, 02:15 PM | #45 |
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I am surprised nobody mentioned the fuel cut setting in the AEM vs. spark cut.
Isn't the ignition cut notorious for causing rocker problems? First thing i would do is make your rev limiter fuel only, and soften it. Off at 7200 on at 6970 something like that. |
03-24-2015, 02:17 PM | #46 |
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Yeah that's seemed to be the consensus regarding AEM limiter issues. I know the oem ecu uses a combination fuel/ignition cut that is fairly kind to rocker arms.
I always thought that a strictly fuel cut rev limiter would cause a lean issue since you are still on the throttle, and possible engine damage? |
03-24-2015, 02:30 PM | #47 | |
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A lean condition can only happen if you have a not quite enough fuel, as if your fuel pressure drops ~10psi and you lose 12% of your injector capacity. If it goes much leaner than that, it will misfire. There is not much room for error, not to mention that a lean condition in an sr20det, from experience I am talking now, does not by itself cause immediate damage if the engine is tuned properly. the lean condition might take a few WOT passes (yes complete passes on a dyno for instance) before the heat builds up to the point where it ruins your piston rings. A single, complete, leaning out to (17:1),WOT pass, on a built sr20det with forgies and proper ignition timing, 20psi of boost on pump gas 93 octane 420BHP, will not hurt anything. Yes it the EGT will sky rocket and your warning light will go off to cool down the engine, but it will live. So Even if it were possible to be "slightly lean sometimes because of a rev-limiter related failure" even that should not have any lasting consequences. OEM engines are different though, the OEM pistons/rings do not tolerate these 17:1 WOT passes, so don't try that. Spark cuts on the other hand lend all sorts of dangerous situations. You remove the spark but not the fuel- where does the fuel go? Some of it stays behind, the rest dumps into the exhaust system where it probably explodes as it passes the turbine. Good for spooling that turbine, bad for the engine, for many reasons that I am unfamiliar with. I could guess that it isn't good for the cylinder walls and rings, and I could guess that the residual fuel will interact and alter your next cylinder event, in perhaps unpredictable ways (the fuel is no longer atomized and suspended, ready for a proper burn) but these are just guesses. I am sure you could google "ignition cut engine failures" or "2-step ignition engine failures" or similar to get a few pictures of engines that fell apart while sitting on a spark cut. |
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03-24-2015, 02:40 PM | #48 |
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Yeah I didn't mean that it injects "some" fuel, but that it alternates between fuel cut and ignition cut while hitting the rev limiter. Well that is what Martin at R.S.Enthalpy told me about the factory ecu limiter. That it is neither strictly fuel nor ignition.
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03-24-2015, 03:13 PM | #49 | ||||||
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http://www.sr20-forum.com/tunercode/...iscussion.html http://www.sr20-forum.com/tuning/143...html#post19535 http://www.sr20-forum.com/tuning/439...-limiters.html Quote:
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From what I gather, our sr20det ecu is fuel cut only, and it does so by eliminating 1 cylinder at a time up to the "hard cut" limit. So is the power FC afaik. AEM has the option to cut both, and the factory configuration file is set for spark first (like a "race" car with no cat). Which is why I posted to begin with- that initial spark cut was probably causing the symptoms they described in several threads, causing rocker failure. |
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03-24-2015, 03:29 PM | #50 | |||
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more info
high performance hyabusa, fuel cut first, "soft" followed by a hard full cut of simultaneously fuel/spark http://www.hayabusa.org/forum/nitrou...uel-spark.html http://honda-tech.com/drag-racing-36...miter-1981086/ "Dont cut fuel while using nitrous..." Quote:
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Traction control http://www.racelogic.co.uk/index.php...l#how-it-works Quote:
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03-24-2015, 03:53 PM | #51 | |
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Lots of really great information in those posts, that is probably way over the head of the average 240sx owner haha. The posts about the TAO puddle are very intriguing.
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So unfortunately there are pro's and con's of both spark and fuel limiting. And figuring out the best mixture of the two seems to be the way to go. I'm curious if anybody has managed to configue the rev limiter to hold a perfectly steady rpm, as they do with the lower rpm "launch control", which should be the least jarring to the valvetrain and engine as well. |
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01-29-2016, 02:55 AM | #52 | |
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Bumping this. Is it possible to set an AEM rev limiter to hold a "constant" rpm, so that the rpms aren't really bouncing up and down? So did we reach a consensus that fuel cut is the way to go, so on an AEM would I want to disable the spark cut completely and strictly rely on the fuel cut settings? Not sure if that's even possible haven't looked in my tuner software in a while. |
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01-29-2016, 05:01 PM | #53 |
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Yes fuel cut, set it softly well before your actual redline. On an OEM bottom end, the OEM redline being around 7200rpm, I set my rev limiter to around 6800 for street cars. You don't want to spin much higher than that on a tight OEM bearing. It's just a safety precaution I take when people say they want to drive for 100k+ miles, this is one of the little things you can do to get the engine to last 10+ years, is to be generous with the RPM limiting (its just a "fun" car, no competition, so minimize risk) Its different if you have an aftermarket tricoat bearing with a .0022" clearance, then you can go to the sky and use a thicker oil. I've taken those to 8200rpm on the OEM lifters, no trouble, but I wouldn't do it repeatedly.
If you set the spark limiter much higher than you will ever go, you wont ever touch it. Newer versions of AEM have different models for fuel cut. The latest versions cut individual cylinders one at a time until the threshold for a softer cut. I am not sure when they started doing that though. |
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