Author Topic: Wide band for street use/tuning?  (Read 9607 times)

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Offline SuperSix

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Wide band for street use/tuning?
« on: July 24 2013, 11:46:12 AM »
Is a good wideband a valuable tool for tuning a new engine install? Or are they best suited for cars that see mostly track time?

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Offline earlbrown

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #1 on: July 24 2013, 01:07:55 PM »
It's good to have PERIOD!


They aren't just for track tuning, they can also help with gas mileage, watching trends for anomalies, making cool looking graphs on powerlogger, and dragging in bitches.



Bitches love widebands.
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Offline SuperSix

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #2 on: July 24 2013, 01:52:57 PM »
Bitches love them?

* SuperSix clicks "Order Now" button.
'87 GN, 60lb, TA49, THDP, FTP cam, T+ lots o' shit - SOLD
'07 Ford F150 Lariat 2WD, 5.4L 3v - 255k
'20 Kubota BX2380. FEL, 60" deck
'78 IH/Case 184 Lo-Boy
'99 Kawasaki Bayou 400 4x4

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #3 on: July 24 2013, 02:02:23 PM »
The more I play with them...the less use I find for them

If I were tuning something that could be adjusted throughout the rpm band for all loads, then yes. 

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Offline Shimy87

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #4 on: July 24 2013, 03:52:17 PM »
The more I play with them...the less use I find for them

If I were tuning something that could be adjusted throughout the rpm band for all loads, then yes. 



Widebands or bitches? :rofl:
87 GN, K&N cold air, gutted cat, TT 5.7 chip, AFPR, 340 Walbro w/ hotwire, 60 LBS injectors, 981 valve springs, 206/206 Cam, RJC Powerplate, LS1 MAF & translator, Vacuum brakes, Hellwig rear sway bar, Energy suspension poly bushings, Razors Alky, Pypes exhaust, 5931 turbo, CK9.5 converter

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #5 on: July 24 2013, 03:57:54 PM »
both
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Offline SuperSix

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #6 on: July 24 2013, 05:49:49 PM »
Steve has 99 problems, but a bitch ain't one.
'87 GN, 60lb, TA49, THDP, FTP cam, T+ lots o' shit - SOLD
'07 Ford F150 Lariat 2WD, 5.4L 3v - 255k
'20 Kubota BX2380. FEL, 60" deck
'78 IH/Case 184 Lo-Boy
'99 Kawasaki Bayou 400 4x4

Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #7 on: July 24 2013, 06:44:57 PM »
Not any more...got the bitches out of my life but I have a couple of damn nice friends
Steve Wood

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Offline SuperSix

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #8 on: July 25 2013, 08:19:46 PM »
Whoooooooooooo!  Weeded out the riff-raff.
'87 GN, 60lb, TA49, THDP, FTP cam, T+ lots o' shit - SOLD
'07 Ford F150 Lariat 2WD, 5.4L 3v - 255k
'20 Kubota BX2380. FEL, 60" deck
'78 IH/Case 184 Lo-Boy
'99 Kawasaki Bayou 400 4x4

Offline tb3

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #9 on: July 25 2013, 09:18:01 PM »
The more I play with them...the less use I find for them

If I were tuning something that could be adjusted throughout the rpm band for all loads, then yes. 



Do you say that because the performance and efficiancy gains are generally very minimal or not enough to usually amount to anything, in (most) our applications?
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Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #10 on: July 25 2013, 10:34:55 PM »
non existant as far as I am concerned...th ink about it...how do you tune for max performance... there are no magic numbers that are "right"

You tune til you see some knock retard and then add a little fuel beyond the point where it goes away for safety.

How do you tune for maximum mpg?  You keep leaning it out until it surges lightly going up a hill.  Then you add some fuel until the surge goes away plus a little more to account for ambient conditions.

Now if you have  a programmable system with a 3d fueling map, a wideband can help you fill in the blanks between specific points, but on the average car with the factory ecm....nope
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Offline tb3

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #11 on: July 25 2013, 11:18:29 PM »
but what about when running at higher boost with alky or race gas? 
at higher boost levels, when margin of error gets more and more critical.... any ability to adjust the fuel equation (tt or similiar chip, adj fpr, maf translator, nozzles, injector sizes, etc.... could be aided by a wideband that is showing you much more finite info than a 02 sensor?
or am I going way overboard with my logic?  lol!
You may end up causing me to sell my wide band from my 84 instead of transferring it to my 87.  lol   :chin:
 
 
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Offline Steve Wood

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #12 on: July 26 2013, 12:24:17 AM »
You are going to drown in that logic/

Alky actually gives you more tolerance from my experience and if you add 2% more fuel with a programmable chip...that is close to  0.2 A/F

Again, there are no magic numbers!  You tune to the edge of detonation and then add a little bit back in...say 2-3% on the street and 1-2% on the strip where ambient conditions are generally more constant.

The street covers a lot more varying conditions so the margin should be larger, imo.

I have seen a couple of cases in the past year where the fuel pump was failing but the owners were just adding more alky without wondering why they needed more alky and were looking at the wb and calling it good.  I noticed the factory o2s were looking strange even tho the wb was saying it was the same a/f as before.

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Offline motorhead

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #13 on: July 26 2013, 09:00:56 AM »
Unlike most people I do have accessible fuel maps (aka VE tables) in all of my cars so a WB02 is a must for dialing in the needs of an engine.

For the casual guy who doesn't have any interest in being a mad scientist it isn't required past the point of initial tune setup as Steve indicated.  A WBO2 is a tool, and like any tool it is only as useful as the guy using it.

Same deal with pressure transducers.

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Offline Scoobum

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Re: Wide band for street use/tuning?
« Reply #14 on: July 26 2013, 10:36:57 AM »
Grudge racing my car I set it up to run 11.5...and for bracket racing 7.1 for the Sportsman class. All I use is narrow band. WB isn't a magic elixir. This is what I've witnessed over the years. Most are tuning only for high gear...and at the top of the track is where most engines let go cuz they're at their leanest. If you're not tuning for low gear...then you're leaving a shitload on the table. This is my thot. Let the turbo/boost and the 3.42's haul you down the track for high gear. Leave Erics chip on the default settings...and make a run with PL. Come back to the pits and have a look at the 02's for low gear...1st and 2nd. What you'll see...is pig rich. Pull the 02's down below 800 for low gear...and watch the car haul it's ass through the 1/8th. Add a little timing to low gear...and then make a run. It'll sink your eyes in the back of your head. The other thing...is get some seat time practising launching.
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