mattspeed3
Member
(scratch)
Okay, so I'm in the market for a CAI or SRI. After hearing about the long term fuel trim variances people were getting with this intake or that intake, I was flip flopping between choices until I sort of realized that seemingly all aftermarket intakes affect LTFTs - correct?
I guess the bigger question I have is, if you're getting a higher than acceptable LTFT variance (say +/-10 or so), does that mean your ECU is actually pumping more or less fuel into your engine than it should be (and is that what the +/- number represents)? Or is it simply that the ECU is correcting to the increased air flow and adjusting by said variance? Or am I getting this all wrong?
It seems intakes with straighteners tend to avoid throwing CELs, so their resulting variance is "acceptable" as deemed by the ECU. What is actually happening when an intake causes a CEL due to unacceptable LTFTs?
Okay, so I'm in the market for a CAI or SRI. After hearing about the long term fuel trim variances people were getting with this intake or that intake, I was flip flopping between choices until I sort of realized that seemingly all aftermarket intakes affect LTFTs - correct?
I guess the bigger question I have is, if you're getting a higher than acceptable LTFT variance (say +/-10 or so), does that mean your ECU is actually pumping more or less fuel into your engine than it should be (and is that what the +/- number represents)? Or is it simply that the ECU is correcting to the increased air flow and adjusting by said variance? Or am I getting this all wrong?
It seems intakes with straighteners tend to avoid throwing CELs, so their resulting variance is "acceptable" as deemed by the ECU. What is actually happening when an intake causes a CEL due to unacceptable LTFTs?