by vandor » Tue Jan 26, 2010 7:11 am
Hello,
I built a Fiat 2000cc twincam engine for a friend/customer this spring/summer, and this fall
we have been tuning the programmable fuel injection and working out other little problems.
The engine has 10.1:1 compression, ported head, valves ~1.5mm larger than stock, 304 degree
duration camshafts, custom made connecting rods, lightened crank, and IDF style throttle bodies
with programmable fuel injection. (I wish we would have bought forged pistons).
During our first dyno day the engine performed as expected once we tuned the proper air-fuel
ratio, ignition timing, and adjusted cam timing. The only restriction seemed to be the tall
air horns inside the air box (the top is removable, so we could test it open).
Max power was at 6800 rpm, about where we expected it to be, and we were happy that we
only needed shorter air horns. One of the things we learned is that max power needed a
lot less timing than we thought. Max advance was 28 degrees from 3000 rpm on. Anything
more than that lost power.
About a month later we went back to the dyno with shorter air horns in the air box, and after
a few runs realized that possibly it was not only the tall air horns that restricted flow, but
also the hose to the air filter. This session was a mixed bag, as we were not able to pull
consistent runs, it seemed something was off but we could just not figure out what it was.
We would do two identical runs, and the AFR would be a full point off!
At the end of the day we gained 2 hp compared to the first session, so we were not too
worried.
For the third run we made a new tube for the air filter with only a single long smooth bend,
and hoped it would not cost us any power. In the meanwhile I have driven the car ~200 miles
to tune the part-throttle part of the fuel mapping.
Surprisingly the engine was 20 HP down on power, and maximum HP occurred around
6000 rpm instead of 6800. We tried it with the top off the air box to eliminate any of
the intake plumbing resistance, but it made virtually no difference. The engine is smooth,
air-fuel ratio is fine, but the power is not there. We tried adjusting ignition, cams, etc,
but since we already optimized it all in the last runs, we always lost power after an
adjustment.
I ran a leakdown test, and the cylinders were all between 3-5%. I could be better, but I
do not think it explains the power loss. Cranking compression is only ~120 psi, most
likely because of the large overlap of the valves (?).
I plan on checking that the cams have not worn and if there is any blockage in
the exhaust. Any other ideas?
Tip for using fuel injection with individual throttle bodies: we had to put a 0.6mm
restrictor in the vacuum line to the Manifold-Air-Pressure sensor to keep the vacuum
signal stable, without that tuning the part-throttle fuel mapping was impossible.
Thank you,
Csaba