Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

I have for sale one excellent condition Mac Powerbook G4 12.1' laptop which I purchased around 9 months ago.

Orginally this machine was purchased for use as my mobile office however I now have a work provided laptop and frankly its a waste having this beautiful Mac sitting around not being used.

The system is still under original Apple warranty and is immaculate without so much as a mark on the case.

Specs:

G4 1.5GHZ

60 Gig Hard Disk

512MB Factory Ram + 1 Gig Additional Genuine Apple Ram Chip Included (Not yet fitted)

Mac OS X Tiger 10.4.6

Firewire 400 Port

USB 2.0 Ports (x2)

Airport Extreme Wireless Adapter

Slot Loading Combo Drive (CD-RW/DVD-ROM)

Bluetooth Inbuilt

NVIDIA GeForce FX Go2500 Graphics 64MB

Lithium ion Battery

Accessories included:

* As new Apple i-sight firewire camera

* Brand new un-opened Apple Mighty Mouse

* STM Neoprene Black Laptop Protective Sleeve

Purchase all of the above for $1700

Interested? Post here or pm me.

Serious offers will be considered - Time wasters will be ignored.

post-46-1151488005.jpg

post-46-1151488425.jpg

post-46-1151488560.jpg

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • @Haggerty this is your red flag. In MAP based ECU's the Manifold pressure X RPM calculation is how the engine knows it is actually...running/going through ANY load. You are confusing the term 'base map' with your base VE/Fuel table. When most people say 'base map' they mean the stock entire tune shipped with the ECU, hopefully aimed at a specific car/setup to use as a base for beginning to tune your specific car. Haltech has a lot of documentation (or at least they used to, I expect it to be better now). Read it voraciously.
    • I saw you mention this earlier and it raised a red flag, but I couldn't believe it was real. Yes, the vacuum signal should vary. It is the one and only load signal from the engine to the ECU, and it MUST vary. It is either not connected or is badly f**ked up in some way.
    • @Haggerty you still haven't answered my question.  Many things you are saying do not make sense for someone who can tune, yet I would not expect someone who cannot tune to be playing with the things in the ECU that you are.  This process would be a lot quicker to figure out if we can remove user error from the equation. 
    • If as it's stalling, the fuel pressure rises, it's saying there's less vacuum in the intake manifold. This is pretty typical of an engine that is slowing down.   While typically is agree it sounds fuel related, it really sounds fuel/air mixture related. Since the whole system has been refurbished, including injectors, pump, etc, it's likely we've altered how well the system is delivering fuel. If someone before you has messed with the IACV because it needed fiddling with as the fuel system was dieing out, we need to readjust it back. Getting things back to factory spec everywhere, is what's going to help the entire system. So if it idles at 400rpm with no IACV, that needs raising. Getting factory air flow back to normal will help us get everything back in spec, and likely help chase down any other issues. Back on IACV, if the base idle (no IACV plugged in) is too far out, it's a lot harder for the ECU to control idle. The IACV duty cycle causes non linear variations in reality. When I've tuned the idle valves in the past, you need to keep it in a relatively narrow window on aftermarket ecus to stop them doing wild dances. It also means if your base idle is too low, the valve needs to open too much, and then the smallest % change ends up being a huge variation.
    • I guess one thing that might be wrong is the manifold pressure.  It is a constant -5.9 and never moves even under 100% throttle and load.  I would expect it to atleast go to 0 correct?  It's doing this with the OEM MAP as well as the ECU vacuum sensor. When trying to tune the base map under load the crosshairs only climb vertically with RPM, but always in the -5.9 column.
×
×
  • Create New...