Buly,
Out of curiousity, what FP do you see at idle?
Mark S.
On 4/8/07, Bulent Aliev <atlasyts@bellsouth.net> wrote:
Mark, I set my FP with engine off at around 36 psi. Buly On Apr 8, 2007, at 1:17 AM, Mark Steitle wrote:
> David, > If you don't mind me asking, how did you go about adjusting your > fuel pressure regulator? I ask because I had mine set too high, > but thought it was correct. I never could get it to run well in
> the lower rpm range. When I reduced the pressure I was finally > able to get the engine to run better than ever. It ran great at > high speed and would even idle smoothly down to 900 -1000 rpm. > With the manifold referenced pressure regulator, the fuel pressure
> will change depending on MAP. If I'm correct, you should set it > with the engine not running. If you set it with the engine > running, your actual pressures will be way too high, causing tuning
> issues. > > Mark S. > > > On 4/7/07, David Leonard <wdleonard@gmail.com> wrote: > Tracy, > > Cool, this is the first I have heard of the injector drive update
> and I am hopeful that it might be the key to my idle problems. I > have done a lot of fiddling and still cant beat it. I am > particularly interested to hear what kind of idle issues it fixes, > to see if it sounds like mine.
> > My problem consists of constantly wandering mixture need... (the O2 > bar is constantly wandering full scale without change in throttle, > load, or mixture setting). I have frequent misses, and I have to
> run my fuel pressure as low as my regulator can be set (about 32 > psi at idle) or the problem gets worse. > > The weirdest thing occurs at shutdown. I shutdown by turning off > the fuel pump. When I do that, the engine runs silky-smoothly for
> a second or two before stopping. > > That made me concerned there might be some sort of electrical > interference between the fuel pump and the EC2 since they were on > the same buss. I moved the pump to a separate buss, tried a
> different pump, tried another buss, and installed a capacitor but > none of that seemed to have any effect. > > Do you think it would be worth sending my EC2 in for the new upgrade? > > --
> > David Leonard > > Turbo Rotary RV-6 N4VY > N4VY.RotaryRoster.net > www.RotaryRoster.net >
leonardiniraq.blogspot.com > > > On 4/6/07, Tracy Crook <lors01@msn.com> wrote: > > EC2 injector drive snubber update.
> > On the subject of the injector driver snubber change, I had hoped > to make it an easy to do in the field thing but it did not turn out > that way. The physical change is fairly simple (adds a single part
> to the board) but the change in injector drive pulse width > requirement was so radical that it is beyond the current range of > the injector flow rate adjustment (Mode 3). This requires an > update to the EC2 software so it has to be done here : (
> > The same thing applies to the EM2 since it determines the fuel flow > by looking at the injector pulse on time. It could not be > recalibrated to compensate for the change so it's software had to
> be updated as well. > > OTOH, if you are currently flying the EC2 and/or EM2 and you are > happy with the way it is running, there is no pressing need to > change anything. This is not a safety of flight issue.
> > This change is only necessary if you are finding it impossible to > get the engine to run smoothly at idle. Note that this is not the > only thing that can cause rough idle so only do this as a last
> resort to fix idle problems. > > Since I only today got the EM2 software changes installed, I still > do not know if there is any fuel burn improvements as a result of > the snubber change. All EC2s shipped since March 20 have this
> change incorporated. > > Tracy > > > >
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