The shop where I dyno'd my car builds a lot of high HP big turbo 2JZs.
You can't compare a lower compression PI engine to a high compression DI engine.
The shop where I dyno'd my car builds a lot of high HP big turbo 2JZs.
Did you stop where it was at or continue until you found MBT? Andy said it was 8ish degrees off, so that would mean you were close to 20*, unless the variance narrows at higher RPMS.
I've always understood it that a more efficient head would take less advance rather than more to make the most power, as the piston can be closer to TDC before igniting. Has anyone looked at NA DMEs? Do they have the same "low timing syndrome"?
You can't compare a lower compression PI engine to a high compression DI engine.
I understood from comments elsewhere that our heads are actually rather inefficient, if we are viewing efficiency by CFM?I've always understood it that a more efficient head would take less advance rather than more to make the most power, as the piston can be closer to TDC before igniting. Has anyone looked at NA DMEs? Do they have the same "low timing syndrome"?
I understood from comments elsewhere that our heads are actually rather inefficient, if we are viewing efficiency by CFM?
Filippo
From Reaper0995:That's been known for a while, 6266 will do 800whp on a 2JZ with head work/cams but the same turbo on a N54 is only good for ~750
The shop where I dyno'd my car builds a lot of high HP big turbo 2JZs. The tuner also said when tuning for MBT on E85 he usually ends up around 16*. Kept telling me to send it when he saw my logged timing was at 12.8*, lol
I don't want to make any conclusions based off purely anecdotal evidence but it looks like there may be a difference between what's in the main timing table and actual timing depending on conditions. But it shouldn't matter for a good tuner - you should be able to find MBT whether it's at 5* or 30* commanded timing.
Yeah stock n54 head flow 160cfm .500 lift. A stock 2j head flows 240cfm. Yes our head is shit lol
Yeah it’s the reason I told Jordan he’s going to have to port S55 motor head if he is going to make more power on 7275 build. I’m guessing BMW thought process was since the motor going to be boosted and have DI we’ll throw a shit head in there to save cost...Amazing isn't it.
Yeah it’s the reason I told Jordan he’s going to have to port S55 motor head if he is going to make more power on 7275 build. I’m guessing BMW thought process was since the motor going to be boosted and have DI we’ll throw a shit head in there to save cost...
Yeah stock n54 head flow 160cfm .500 lift. A stock 2j head flows 240cfm. Yes our head is shit lol
You can port it and get it from horrible to mediocre flow lol. But honestly it is all upside there I would surmise. Drop boost, improve transient response, drop temps.
Filippo
@jyamona since you have the routines pretty well documented do you know whether or not BMW is using continentals c_iga_ini_h_rng? It's a long shot but I'm wondering if BMW is adding their timing tables on-top of that initialization value (6 degrees). I've also noticed that the timing advance seen in the low to mid range around 1750-4000 rpm at lighter loads is a tad lower in stock form over what I've seen on other stock DI platforms by about 6 degrees.
Reliability should go up well. We know anyone that has done this with before/after data?
Filippo
Thanks for the response Jake I have a timing light and can double check but it wont be tonight unfortunately. I'll test it out tomorrow evening though, I'll also get the scope on the CPS and the cylinder 1 ignition coil.Hah, funny you ask. I looked at this earlier today actually. Production roms are set to 8* for this table, but tracing the routines, it is only used as an initialization value (as expected... all "_ini_" are this way), at ecu reset or engine stop.
I've traced the logged MHD "Timing Cyl [X]" parameters, and they are indeed logging the final ignition advance value that is sent to the base hardware (think: BIOS level) to be realized. This points to the difference being a constant value, probably baked into the hardware layer somewhere. I also found a reference tied to the OBD PID for timing cyl 1 with a comment "Ignition timing spark advance for cyl #1 (not including mechanical advance)," which again would point to a constant offset. Why is it used, I don't know. I've been told "convention" is a main reason OEM's do things like this.
Anyone have a timing light and would like to confirm my suspicion? A constant offset would be nothing of concern, you just would have to add/subtract it if you wanted to compare timing numbers w/ a Syvecs car.