Jump to content
SAU Community

Power Loss On Downshifts, Bouncing Idle And Slight Hesitation At Specific Rev Point -R34Gtt


Recommended Posts

To properly check tdc you need a dead stop in the plug hole, or a dial indicator with a long plunger. Looking at it isn't good enough.

Does the PFC display what timing it is running? You should look at it , and if says 20 set cas to read 20 etc...

It always says 15 on the commander (after warming up n idling), even when I set it to 20 yesterday (with TPS off), TPS connected it reads 15 at crank AND power fc as well.

Omg did you not read anything?

Irrespective to what is set on the CAS the ECU won't show what's set. It will always think it's 15 even though the CAS has been dialled to 30

To properly check tdc you need a dead stop in the plug hole, or a dial indicator with a long plunger. Looking at it isn't good enough.

Does the PFC display what timing it is running? You should look at it , and if says 20 set cas to read 20 etc...

^^ I do not know what is this. Dead stop/ dial indicator. haha

At some point you need to make a call and take it somewhere to get it sorted.

If all of this is going over your head just save the hassle and pay someone.

If you don't know what a dial indicator or dead stop (also called piston stop) is, Google it! Google how to check tdc. It's not hard.

Edited by Ben C34

Why pay someone with no guarantee of a proper fix?? When its more rewarding and easy to ask, learn, try etc. And spend money buying my own tools/equipment rather than pay a workshop's labour. I would only go to a workshop after I have exhausted all avenues, tried everything and got as desparate as a cheap crack whore..

And I have already mentioned many times that the bov entry/power loss on shifts is a problem that doesn't really bother me anymore - I can live with it. Lets take this out of the equation, it will be my last fix.

Lets fix the timing first! hehe.. at least I discovered it was the timing that was causing power loss after all.

Edited by rondofj

Well so long as you are having fun with what you are doing that's all that matters.

Keep in mind by cranking in heaps of extra timing your risking popping your engine , which would cost more than getting someone to fix your current problem. I'm sure your tuner would freak out if you told him you added 6 degrees to the map and messed with the cas.

And by the way, didn't you cause the power loss by messing with the cas?

Edited by Ben C34

That last sentence makes me actually worried, just reading it on page 17 of this thread..

One does not simply add 6 degrees to the map and mess with the CAS :P

  • Like 1

My guess would be Yavus set timing at 20deg with TPS connected and you have played with it at some point then reset it to what it should be, try setting it to 20deg with TPS connected and see how that goes

And I wouldn't be surprised if that puts the bolt on the CAS back in the middle

Because then you might muck around with something else, make it a bit lean and BANG... For this critical stuff you are paying a workshop for labour that includes knowledge, wisdom, and a system of doing things properly. One of your mistakes might cost you your engine, a good workshop won't make that mistake.

  • Like 1

Well so long as you are having fun with what you are doing that's all that matters.

Keep in mind by cranking in heaps of extra timing your risking popping your engine , which would cost more than getting someone to fix your current problem. I'm sure your tuner would freak out if you told him you added 6 degrees to the map and messed with the cas.

And by the way, didn't you cause the power loss by messing with the cas?

This is a strange one, I thought that as well, but it wasn't immediately too obvious on that day, maybe 2-3 days later, could have been my mind playing games.. I do think its the messing with cas, I keep saying before it was on the centre of the three bolts when i last set timing, and before I took it off to put Wolverines one in, now its almost fully clockwise at the same timing.

Could it be because I messed with the TPS before that and then brought it back to 0.41V @idle which is what it originally was. And thats all I messed with. And lost that white TPS plug cap.

Cranking extra timing on the pfc brought my power back to what it was before, maybe a bit sharper now, and it doesn't ping/knock at this level, does it mean its still unsafe? Dont understand this one. But crank up 1 more degree and it will knock at high rpm in 3rd.

Edited by rondofj

My guess would be Yavus set timing at 20deg with TPS connected and you have played with it at some point then reset it to what it should be, try setting it to 20deg with TPS connected and see how that goes

And I wouldn't be surprised if that puts the bolt on the CAS back in the middle

^^ THIS seems like the most likely thing that has happened. Will be trying that. What do the others think?

Stock ECU has ignition ramp to stabilise idle, thus when TPS is at 0.45v aka throttle off.. closed loop idle/o2 is enabled - this is why on a stock ECU when you're trying to set your base timing you'll notice it jumps all over the shop.

PowerFC I believe does not have ignition ramp to stabilise idle, so there's no need to unplug the TPS to set base idle and/or the base timing.

based on my logging I've found the idle control does.... I don't have 15 degrees set anywhere on my map yet log monitor shows 15 at idle.

I still dont get how cranking up the maps 6+ degrees can be detrimental to my motor as it doesnt knock at that level and goes hard like before?

Because you don't KNOW that it's not knocking. You are trusting very unreliable knock sensors to tell you that it's not knocking. It could well have more knock than is healthy and you can't hear it.

You have arbitrarily advanced the ignition 6 degrees everywhere and you DO NOT know for sure that it was actually retarded by that amount. It may well have NOT been retarded and in fact has some other problem causing your poor performance. The combination of the possible other problem + 6 degrees extra timing might not be real healthy.

Just because it now goes hard again doesn't mean that all is well with the world. It might, but it is not bulletproof by any means. And unless you can do a few of the basic verification checks that have been outlined you are flying very blind.

Edited by GTSBoy
  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Congrats on the career change!  I did something similar at the start of the year too, left IT / corporate after nearly 2 decades. Soooo when's the motor coming out for the spark plug change?
    • Hi guys, long time no post as per usual! It's been a busy year so far, the biggest thing being a new job.  After 28 years in the automotive industry I decided it was time for a change.  I was losing faith in the industry and where it's heading.  Now in a completely different industry (electrical) working for a company that manufacture water pump contollers.  Not as sexy as cars but it's an interesting,  challenging industry. I now don't work Saturdays which is a bonus!  It's still 50-55 hours a week but having Saturdays ack after 28 years of working them is awesome!   No news on the GT-R but i did decide to add some more JDM goodness into my life....           1990 300 ZX.  She's not perfect but for a 35 year old car she ain't bad!  Just going to tidy it up a bit and enjoy it.  It's currently auto but will start stockpiling everything for a manual swap. It WILL distract me even further from the GT-R but im hoping not for too long! It somewhat proves a 6'8" freak can fit in a 300 ZX.  Sort of...  I drove it home from the previous owners house in Melbourne via Black Spur and Merton Gap (2 awesome bits of Victorian twisty road) and it was amazing!  Handles so well!!!   I don't think it would be worthy of a full build page but I'll post up some of the upgrades here if anyone is interested?  Cheers guys!
    • End game is to: - Remove all the slop from old worn parts - Adjust setup so that the wheels actually fit and the car is drivable (currently it is not because of the extreme rubbing on the guards).   Progress over the last couple of days, removed the rear hubs! Next steps: - Buy bushings - Replace bushings/bearings on hub - Reinstall
    • Cracked deck  And other cam snap stuff   
×
×
  • Create New...