proamas
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 22, 2015
- Threads
- 13
- Messages
- 159
- Reaction score
- 41
- Location
- Tampa, Florida
- Vehicle(s)
- 2015 Mustang GT 50 Year Package
I don't think the IMRC's help the cause, but it's also an issue with the actual and predictive throttle angles, since it's always been guess and check with the coyote platform on copperhead and tricor. As the previous gen coyote has this issue as well, most tuner's have just "figured out the angles" though.
The way I understand it is, you get information from the driver demand torque source, which registers to a map point, which also has an inverse. The demand requests X amount of torque at the engine, and an inverse value which is an airflow amount (which is a combo of many things, imrc and cam timing are a few of them), which also then maps to a predictive throttle angle. If the actual angle isn't matching, you'll get a bucking.
This angle is derived from an IMRC opening value, throttle angle value. Adding boost to the mix that isn't tuned for essentially closes the throttle as it is exceeding it's mapped point airflow amount, so it eventually says "ok, time to close the throttle" even though theres more air coming.
This was a super elementary way of explaining it.
The answer may be easy, but how does Whipple handle this?
Sponsored