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Thread: ESE's works engine tuner

  1. #30151
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    20th January 2010 - 14:41
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    husaberg
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    A view of a YZR500 i have never seen before
    Click image for larger version. 

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    Quote Originally Posted by Katman View Post
    I reminder distinctly .




    Kinky is using a feather. Perverted is using the whole chicken

  2. #30152
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    20th April 2011 - 08:45
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    Quote Originally Posted by speedpro View Post
    The last time I checked, a heated wire was used, no moving parts. Just a controller to maintain the current through the wire at a constant value. The amount of voltage to maintain the current is proportional to the air flow cooling the wire.
    Problem: the wire can't tell inflowing air from outflowing air. The same mass of air might even pass the wire four times during the inlet phase and still end up outside of the crankcase.
    Shielding one side of the wire does help a bit, but not enough. A second wire downstream of the first one, and some clever software, might be a solution, but at the cost of increased inlet tract length.

  3. #30153
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    18th May 2007 - 20:23
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    .
    A spit of fuel on the wire confuses things too.

  4. #30154
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    12th February 2004 - 10:29
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    I thought we were considering port injected 2 strokes. But yes, I see the problem. Surely at the entrance to an airbox the flow would essentially be one way.
    The multidirectional airflow would be a problem with any measuring device. The flapper valve would become a multipurpose reed valve. That sort of sounds like disc valve defeat.

  5. #30155
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    18th May 2007 - 20:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by speedpro View Post
    I thought we were considering port injected 2 strokes.
    True, but vertically down the B port. Not as much but sadly some fuel still finds its way out of the inlet. An air flow meter on a large airbox is a good idea, and maybe the way the RONAX and SUTER do it, who knows? but it is not my plan, I think there is a better less cumbersome and more direct way.

  6. #30156
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    20th April 2011 - 08:45
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    Quote Originally Posted by TZ350 View Post
    An air flow meter on a large airbox is a good idea... but it is not my plan, I think there is a better less cumbersome and more direct way.
    Yes, I think you're on the right track with your approach, TeeZee.

  7. #30157
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    18th March 2012 - 08:35
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    Homebuilt chassi, Kawasaki 212cc
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    Quote Originally Posted by peewee View Post
    looks like nice work Patrick. I was testing mine alittle more today with the 30%. I made the needle 1 turn richer from last time but it still has alittle zing when clearing the crankcase. maybe it needs 1 more turn rich but really its not a big problem I guess.


    Nice.
    IT seems to shovel a lot of dirt =)

  8. #30158
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    18th March 2012 - 08:35
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    First startup with the new cylinder, the rattling is the clutch, no springs, dragrace setup.
    Overall it went nice.
    Kickstarter rubbed against the frame and a blindnut in the floatbowl got loose therefor it died on me, and the fuel on the floor.
    The blindnut is blocking a hole in the bowl as i haven´t got the powerjet mounted yet, it is on one of my other carbs.

    [/QUOTE]

  9. #30159
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    13th February 2016 - 09:21
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    Quote Originally Posted by TZ350 View Post

    Some sort of work around is required.
    Why not see it as a standard event?

    You close the throttle and the average (blip filter) TPS position drops, the exhaust cools. If the average position drops below a certain threshold a timer is started. The timer stops at the time the pipe is considered "cold".

    If the average TPS position then exceeds a threshold you can use a formula such as (for simplicity assuming cooling time equals heating time):

    TPS input - (Cooled time/Cold time * Injection correction) = TPS output.
    Cooled time = Cooled time - 1 till cooled time = 0

    It'sa KISS bandaid. No sensor problems.

  10. #30160
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    18th March 2012 - 08:35
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    I have mentioned it before, a L-jetronic air meter should probably work without mods, just alter the springtension.


  11. #30161
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    12th March 2010 - 16:56
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    pretty sure this is a fuel injected twostroke, single cylinder too. Hot bulb type, ie squirt the fuel at the hot bulb in the combustion chamber. Thought about that TZ?
    https://youtu.be/psSkJ5K709o

  12. #30162
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    18th May 2007 - 20:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frits Overmars View Post
    Yes, I think you're on the right track with your approach, TeeZee.
    Well actually it was Flettners original idea to measure the crankcase pressure at a set point. He suggested a sample and hold approach and tried it with a small rotating valve timed to the peak crankcase pressure. It showed promise on his 360. I am just trying to refine it a bit by using a small PLC.

  13. #30163
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    22nd November 2013 - 16:32
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    Tzee, I reckon that any device like a vane style air flow meter, or even a hot wire, if it has an adequate damping volume downstream to ensure a nett one way flow to the engine, will be so slow to respond that it’s out of the question. You need a indicative signal every rev.

    As you suggest, sampling crankcase pressure at some suitable fixed point might be the go, even with Fletto’s opening valve. Either way, it’ll need a presure sensor with good response.

    Brett suggested some time ago an IR sensor that was set into the top of a transfer port, aimed into the cylinder. With this, essentially sampling at a fixed crank angle, one could infer the temp, hence whether combustion took place or not, then inject the right amount of fuel possible for the same cycle (by altering the injector closing angle point), or certainly the next cycle.
    "Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.”

  14. #30164
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    18th May 2007 - 20:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by ken seeber View Post
    As you suggest, sampling crankcase pressure at some suitable fixed point might be the go, even with Fletto’s opening valve. Either way, it’ll need a pressure sensor with good response.
    For good response I am going to try a MAP sensor (which we know are relatively slow) to get the ambient outside air pressure for a base line and use a Piezo for the positive crankcase pressure pulse. Piezo's are fast in comparison. All I am looking for is relative changes in maximum crank case pressure.

    The evolution of KTM's EFI cylinders. In conversation maybe about 2012 Flettner advised them go for vertically down the B ports like he has on the BigHorn. They told him they would do something more sophisticated.

    Click image for larger version. 

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    Cylinder on the left is their sophisticated effort, direct injection, middle is direct port injection, cylinder on the right is vertically down the B ports just like Flettner suggested and it must be what works best as they are currently running them on their ""revolutionary"" fuel injected bikes.

    Flettner is certainly worth listening too.

  15. #30165
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    5th April 2013 - 13:09
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    Quote Originally Posted by husaberg View Post
    A view of a YZR500 i have never seen before
    Click image for larger version. 

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    Looks old. Rotating drum powervalve?

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