Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I was driving my R32 GTR at altitude on the weekend and it ran like a dog up there. Really unresponsive and laggy and when at 5-10km/h it was jerky pretty much a dog.

Once I came out of altitude (3000+ feet) it started to drive fine again.

I know the air is thinner up there but i wasnt expecting such a change. I have had the car up higher before but that was with AFM's and standard computer.

Any ideas?

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/456144-altitude-driving/
Share on other sites

I have had the car up higher before but that was with AFM's and standard computer.

Any ideas?

I think you answered your own question. But until you tell us exactly what is different between now and previously, it would be difficult to speculate on the causes.

Yuh, people say that pretty much all ECUs are as good as each other, but there is one area where some ECUs don't handle their shit at all well, and that is altitude compensation.

When you get rid of AFMs and rely on MAP sensors, the ABSOLUTE pressure in the inlet manifold is used as the load measurement (coupled with revs of course).

If it is tuned at sea level (101.325 kPa atmospheric pressure) then the pressure drop driving air across the throttle body = 101.325 - MAP. If MAP is 50 kPA, then that driving pressure is 51.325 kPa forcing air across the throttlebody.

But if that same car is taken to 1000m elevation, the atmospheric pressure is only about 90 kPa. For the same MAP of 50 kPa, the driving force across the throttle body is only 90 - 50 = 40. Ie, you only have 80% of the true pressure you used to have, and only get about the square root of that (back to ~90%) as a resulting air flow. Then you factor in the lower density of the air (another 90%) and you lose a little bit more. End result....for the same load signal seen by the ECU, you're only getting ~90% of the air flow you had when it was tuned. Yet the ECU will still shove in 100% of the fuel.

Decent MAP based ECUs need to have a good atmospheric pressure compensation built in to account for this.

Edited by GTSBoy

Thanks for that - tuner finally came back to me and has said the same thing. He said can install a good atmospheric pressure sensor but if you do not go across that road (desert road north island NZ) than not really required. He has seen it before on customers cars and his car also.

Thanks for the help :)

There are a few people running at the Snowy Mountains 1000 in NSW which is very high altitude, first time they went there the cars ran crap, second time they brought their tuners with them and problems were sorted by pulling fuel out.

Not something most would be thinking about until they went through it......

Yuh, people say that pretty much all ECUs are as good as each other, but there is one area where some ECUs don't handle their shit at all well, and that is altitude compensation.

When you get rid of AFMs and rely on MAP sensors, the ABSOLUTE pressure in the inlet manifold is used as the load measurement (coupled with revs of course).

If it is tuned at sea level (101.325 kPa atmospheric pressure) then the pressure drop driving air across the throttle body = 101.325 - MAP. If MAP is 50 kPA, then that driving pressure is 51.325 kPa forcing air across the throttlebody.

But if that same car is taken to 1000m elevation, the atmospheric pressure is only about 90 kPa. For the same MAP of 50 kPa, the driving force across the throttle body is only 90 - 50 = 40. Ie, you only have 80% of the true pressure you used to have, and only get about the square root of that (back to ~90%) as a resulting air flow. Then you factor in the lower density of the air (another 90%) and you lose a little bit more. End result....for the same load signal seen by the ECU, you're only getting ~90% of the air flow you had when it was tuned. Yet the ECU will still shove in 100% of the fuel.

Decent MAP based ECUs need to have a good atmospheric pressure compensation built in to account for this.

(y) Though the ECU is also only as good as the person operating it. A lot of ECUs default (/ force) the tuner to use gauge pressure for the fuel table setup and apply baro correction to it as part of the fuel calculation, though if you are using Alpha-N (as you would with an RB26 with an ITB intake manifold) then the fuel calculation becomes a bit "different" and you need to ensure the ECU has the facility to do baro correction, and you of course need to enable that mode as well

Not something most would be thinking about until they went through it......

Its a bit disappointing how much seems to be overlooked by people willing to take lots of money on the premise they know how to make the car entirely usable.

  • 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

    • You just need to remove the compressor housing, not the entire turbo. I would not be drilling and tapping anything with the housing still on anyways. 
    • So, I put my boat on a boat. First of all, I'm going to come out and say it. Why is Tasmania not considered a holy goal, an apex that all road-legal modified cars go to, to experience? This place is an absolute wonderland of titanic proportions. If people are already getting club runs for once in a lifetime 30 person cruises to Tassy then I've never seemed to see it. It is like someone replaced the entire place with an idyllic wonderland for cars, and all of the people living there with paid actors who are kind, humble, and friendly. Dear god. After doing a lap of almost all of the place I've found that it's a great way to find out all of the little things that the car isn't doing quite right and a great way to figure it all out. All in all, I drove for 4 hours a day for a week and nothing broke. I didn't even need to open the engine bay. This is by all means a great success, but it has left me with a list of things to potentially address. I also now have a 3D printed wheel fitment tool which annoyingly hasn't got any threads in it to actually assemble it. I might be able to tape it together to check the sizing I actually want to use, but it'll likely involving pulling the shocks out to properly measure travel at least at the front, and probably raise the car while I'm at it, at least in the rear. I scraped on quite a few things and I'm not sure how else to go about it. I was taking anything with a bump at what felt like 89 degree angles. And address those 10 other tasks. And wash the car. God damn it is dirty. And somehow, the weather was perfect the entire time - And because I was on the top of Mt Wellington it turns out it was very much about to freeze up there. I did something I typically never do and took some photos up there in what must have been -10 and the foggy felt like suspended ice, rather than mere fog. If you own a car in Australia, you owe it to yourself to do it.
    • Damn that was hilarious, and a bit embarrassing for skylines in general 😂 vintage car life ey. That R33 really stomped. Pretty entertaining stuff
    • Hi, I have a r32 gtr transmission. Does any of you guys have an idea how much power it will hold with the billet center plate and stock gearset? At what power level and use did yours brake with or without billet plate? Thanks, Oystein Lovik
    • Saw this replica police car based on a Mitsubishi Starion XX parked next to a 'police box' (it's literally a box) in Hirohata, Himeji City in Hyogo prefecture the other day. It's owned by Morii-san who is a local Mitsubishi Starion enthusiast. According to a local radio station blog post, he always wanted to make a police car himself based on ones he saw in his favourite Manga comics.  As it's illegal to modify a car to look like a police car and drive on the road, Morii-san tried many times to get permission from Aboshi police station headquarters nearby. They refused initially by after they got tired of that they granted him permission. However, the car can only be displayed on private property and obviously can't be registered as long as the police livery is present. The car was completed at a cost of 1.5 million yen (US$ 10,000) in addition to the car cost. A location was chosen outside Hirohata Police box where the car can easily been seen from the street. Morii-san has two other Starion road cars, both widebody GSR-VRs.
×
×
  • Create New...