Attachment 292203
Ok, making progress, that's if you can call getting it wrong progress.
Attachment 292202
Ecotrons has a very clever self tuning feature where you tell the map what Lambda you want at what RPM and the ECU will read the ALM O2 sensor and adjust the mixture for you.
Attachment 292204
The green squares on the map are where the ECU has completed the tuning process and delivered the Lambda asked for.
But

you do have to ask for the right Lambda value for the engine. And this is where I went wrong tonight, I made the lower end to rich and eventually after a lot of auto tuning work the motor could not pull the skin of a rice pudding and drag itself into the power band.
On a rolling road dyno you can only do this auto tuning at low RPM and light loads because the Auto Tuning function needs the throttle and rpm to be held steady for 10 seconds or so to work.
The auto tuning feature works better and you can cover more of the map if you can ride on the road and use the head wind as a load or better yet, use a dyno with a brake to hold the engine steady.
Attachment 292205
My mistake was asking for to rich a Lambda at low throttle settings, and having the bike struggling to pickup on the dyno. I had made the map 0.85 Lambda everywhere, I should have stuck with the default map that had Lambda 1 at low RPM and dropping to Lambda 0.85 - 0.82 at max power.
But being able to make planned mistakes is a step better than just making ignorant mistakes and not knowing why.
So .... its progress ...

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