Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 63
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

What sort of part time job do you have hosh?

Edit: I'm really f**king touched that you bothered to write this post out in an almost choerent fashion using some punctuation and occasionaly using spelling that a normal person can understand.  

Unlike the insincere pitiful excuse for an apology you wrote out.  UNDER DURESS.  

If you really cared you might have used a university computer to check the thread.  But you didn't.    

Don't feed me some Bulls**t story about how you are mental and lack the fine motor coordination skills to type on a keyboard or something like that because you are at UQ studying Engineering which means you at least passed grade 10 english.  You also probably went to some private school for trust fund babies where mummy and daddy gave you everything you wanted.  Which also probably means you have no manners or respect for anything that others have spent considerable amounts of their free time and hard earnt money building because you've never had to work for anything in yor entire life.  

Hosh, you're missing the point of all of this.  You now have the princely sum of 7 posts to your name three of them are threads.  Your posting of threads is akin to walking into a room shouting "hello everybody" leaving a tape recorder in the room and saying you'll listen to it when it's convinient for you.  Sometime like two weeks later.  

Enjoy the engineering course.  I hope university crushes your fragile and delicate spirit and you end up as jaded as me.  

take care.

Wow.. I feel da love there.. should I be scared of you on the next cruise outing? Assuming I can attend and you are there. :rofl: Oh dont worry... I drive slow and I dont tailgate.. :)

I thought tom green went to a private school also???

Anyways my names Ben, i am 22 work for a customs broker at hamilton live close to the city.

like most young guys my life consists of nice cars, sexy womenand a few drinks out, all the things we all just cant get enough of.

nah, you're alright, and you got me lost that time, then we laughed about, and I decided that I didn't care.  Plus you have a GT wing and Cool rims that you're going to sell me at mates rates if/when you crash that fine looking car you have.  (please)

LOL..... Oh now that you mentioned it.. I remember who you are now... heheh

As to me crashing... grrr.... :bonk: :flamer: :fart: :kick: :slap: this is what you get for even think of the posibility.. :)

Mates rates... lol... wats tat? :confused: heheheh :rofl:

Hrmm.. just found out that the poeple that I got the rims off have/are going out of business.. tho I was told by a friend that the set I got was the last set they had.. :upurs: heheh

Names michael, drive a grey 32, doin psychology at shafston and by then sounds of it one of my 1st patients will be Charly (jokes) also went to a private school... we beat Johns in rugby thats all the matters, also work at the arnotts factory eating lotsa biscuits.

Peace

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • God damnit. The only option I actually have in the software is the one that is screenshotted. I am glad that I at least got it right... for those two points. Would it actually change anything if I chose/used 80C and 120C as the two points instead? My brain wants to imagine the formula put into HPtuners would be the same equation, otherwise none of this makes sense to me, unless: 1) The formula you put into VCM Scanner/HPTuners is always linear 2) The two points/input pairs are only arbitrary to choose (as the documentation implies) IF the actual scaling of the sensor is linear. then 3) If the scaling is not linear, the two points you choose matter a great deal, because the formula will draw a line between those two points only.
    • Nah, that is hella wrong. If I do a simple linear between 150°C (0.407v) and 50°C (2.98v) I get the formula Temperature = -38.8651*voltage + 165.8181 It is perfectly correct at 50 and 150, but it is as much as 20° out in the region of 110°C, because the actual data is significantly non-linear there. It is no more than 4° out down at the lowest temperatures, but is is seriously shit almost everywhere. I cannot believe that the instruction is to do a 2 point linear fit. I would say the method I used previously would have to be better.
    • When I said "wiring diagram", I meant the car's wiring diagram. You need to understand how and when 12V appears on certain wires/terminals, when 0V is allowed to appear on certain wires/terminals (which is the difference between supply side switching, and earth side switching), for the way that the car is supposed to work without the immobiliser. Then you start looking for those voltages in the appropriate places at the appropriate times (ie, relay terminals, ECU terminals, fuel pump terminals, at different ignition switch positions, and at times such as "immediately after switching to ON" and "say, 5-10s after switching to ON". You will find that you are not getting what you need when and where you need it, and because you understand what you need and when, from working through the wiring diagram, you can then likely work out why you're not getting it. And that will lead you to the mess that has been made of the associated wires around the immobiliser. But seriously, there is no way that we will be able to find or lead you to the fault from here. You will have to do it at the car, because it will be something f**ked up, and there are a near infinite number of ways for it to be f**ked up. The wiring diagram will give you wire colours and pin numbers and so you can do continuity testing and voltage/time probing and start to work out what is right and what is wrong. I can only close my eyes and imagine a rat's nest of wiring under the dash. You can actually see and touch it.
    • So I found this: https://www.efihardware.com/temperature-sensor-voltage-calculator I didn't know what the pullup resistor is. So I thought if I used my table of known values I could estimate it by putting a value into the pullup resistor, and this should line up with the voltages I had measured. Eventually I got this table out of it by using 210ohms as the pullup resistor. 180C 0.232V - Predicted 175C 0.254V - Predicted 170C 0.278V - Predicted 165C 0.305V - Predicted 160C 0.336V - Predicted 155C 0.369V - Predicted 150C 0.407V - Predicted 145C 0.448V - Predicted 140C 0.494V - Predicted 135C 0.545V - Predicted 130C 0.603V - Predicted 125C 0.668V - Predicted 120C 0.740V - Predicted 115C 0.817V - Predicted 110C 0.914V - Predicted 105C 1.023V - Predicted 100C 1.15V 90C 1.42V - Predicted 85C 1.59V 80C 1.74V 75C 1.94V 70C 2.10V 65C 2.33V 60C 2.56V 58C 2.68V 57C 2.70V 56C 2.74V 55C 2.78V 54C 2.80V 50C 2.98V 49C 3.06V 47C 3.18V 45C 3.23V 43C 3.36V 40C 3.51V 37C 3.67V 35C 3.75V 30C 4.00V As before, the formula in HPTuners is here: https://www.hptuners.com/documentation/files/VCM-Scanner/Content/vcm_scanner/defining_a_transform.htm?Highlight=defining a transform Specifically: In my case I used 50C and 150C, given the sensor is supposedly for that. Input 1 = 2.98V Output 1 = 50C Input 2 = 0.407V Output 2 = 150C (0.407-2.98) / (150-50) -2.573/100 = -0.02573 2.98/-0.02573 + 47.045 = 50 So the corresponding formula should be: (Input / -0.02573) + 47.045 = Output.   If someone can confirm my math it'd be great. Supposedly you can pick any two pairs of the data to make this formula.
×
×
  • Create New...