Vacuum at idle - and vacuum in general
Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 4:48 pm
Hello everybody,
I recently got my Fiat Panda running with the Megajolt. Great! For the time being I use the default "safe" map, it is working reasonably well already
I have seen various discussions about vacuum takeoff positions - on some cars, the vacuum is zero at idle, since the throttle valve covers the takeoff position.
My simple question / statement: The Megajolt should replicate the distributor behaviour. So, if the distributor is running with no vacuum advance at idle, that is what the engine wants, hence the Megajolt should be set to do the same thing (?)
Furthermore, if the vacuum takeoff is in a "funny" place (in or close to the venturi), or is ported, that should not matter either. The vacuum advance data is related only to the vacuum value. If the engineers at the factory have decided that the vacum values fed to the distributor should vary in a complex matter, it is probably what the engine wants anyway to behave properly. So we don't have to worry about this at all. In fact, it would be wrong to take the vacuum from somewhere else.
In my car, the vacuum advance is simply stated (Haynes manual) as 12+/-2 degrees, i.e. no curve is given. So what I plan to do is to just see what the maximum vacuum can become (driving the car on idle and under part load at various engine speeds), and set 12 degrees at that load value, with a linear decrease to zero at full load (no vacuum). If the car idles at zero vacuum, that would be perfectly ok.
Or am I missing something here?
I recently got my Fiat Panda running with the Megajolt. Great! For the time being I use the default "safe" map, it is working reasonably well already
I have seen various discussions about vacuum takeoff positions - on some cars, the vacuum is zero at idle, since the throttle valve covers the takeoff position.
My simple question / statement: The Megajolt should replicate the distributor behaviour. So, if the distributor is running with no vacuum advance at idle, that is what the engine wants, hence the Megajolt should be set to do the same thing (?)
Furthermore, if the vacuum takeoff is in a "funny" place (in or close to the venturi), or is ported, that should not matter either. The vacuum advance data is related only to the vacuum value. If the engineers at the factory have decided that the vacum values fed to the distributor should vary in a complex matter, it is probably what the engine wants anyway to behave properly. So we don't have to worry about this at all. In fact, it would be wrong to take the vacuum from somewhere else.
In my car, the vacuum advance is simply stated (Haynes manual) as 12+/-2 degrees, i.e. no curve is given. So what I plan to do is to just see what the maximum vacuum can become (driving the car on idle and under part load at various engine speeds), and set 12 degrees at that load value, with a linear decrease to zero at full load (no vacuum). If the car idles at zero vacuum, that would be perfectly ok.
Or am I missing something here?