Elevation question
I live in Colorado and am wondering if the elevation (6500 ft above sea-level) might be causing it to run a little rich (or lean).
Any suggestions as to how I could make it run better without spending a mint?
Thanks
Did you buy yours at PPHD? They should have recommended the correct tune for this area.
It doesn't pop or anything when I decelerate but it seems like it hesitates at low speed. It also runs pretty rough when you first start it up until it warms up. I haven't done any mods to it yet and have about 130 miles on it. Maybe it needs to break in more? I don't know because I have never owned a brand new bike before.
If it doesn't smooth out, take it back and let the techs work on it. Could be something as simple as a bad plug or faulty sensor.
Have alook at this Fuel Injection for some info.
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Speed density is the most simple of EFI. The computer measures two parameter - rpm and throttle position - and feeds fuel according to a look up table. Think of a spread sheet with rpm at the top and TPS on the side. The computer assumes the density of the air, which we all know is affected by temperature, altitude, humidity, etc. So the mixture is usually pretty close, but rarely dead on. But it's close enough and with carefull tuning you can make it work really well. Far better than any carb.
Then you add the O2 sensors, which is a huge leap in technology. The computer uses the same speed density table to send the signal to the injectors. But that signal gets modified based on the O2 sensor readings to correct for variances in the system. That will correct for altitude changes, humidity, temp etc. But it's limited. In stock form, the computer can only adjust by about 10-12%. So the look up tables need to be fairly accurate to begin with. The trick with these systems is to ignore the O2 sensor input, and tune for best ratio at most cell points. Sounds a lot more complicated than it really is. I tuned the EFI in my car in about an hour on the road. Newer systems - like the Techlusion - need no operator tuning. It uses a true wide band WEGO sensor and does the tuning itself. Very slick. PFM.
A mass air system doesn't really use a map like you see in speed density. It reads the mass of air coming in to the engine, rpm's, TPS, BPS, etc, and calculates the currect injector pulse. Much more comlicated and expensive. Also, much more difficult to modify for performance. Big changes require a new mass air sensor ($$$). Changes later require another sensor ($$$). The injectors are matched to the sensor, so you have to change them, too. Look what you have to do with a Mustang. Most newer cars are mass air, but many newer trucks (Dodge) are still speed density.
All EFI systems get modified in a third and fourth dimension as well . If the air temp is below 40*, use a differant table/calculation, if head temp is above 240* use a differant table/calculation, etc. All those mods are to improve cold starts, emissions, driveability, etc.
Whew, that was rather long winded wasn't it? Didn't mean to ramble like that, sorry.
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