TurboDog's Dad
Member
I'll stay out of the whole Nick/Nick battle. Advisory reading for you guys wanting to learn more about fuel/timing controls would be the Bosch automotive handbook and bosch electrical book.
As one Nick says, getting a replacement ecu through a full CARB test is damn near impossible. A friend of mine that does ecu calibration for the OEs, says it takes them five engineers for two years to come up with a calibration for one car. This might give you an idea of how difficult/time consuming/expensive it is and how unlikely it is that any of the vendors (including us, Flyin' Protege) are of making it happen.
We went with a rising rate regulator on our kit because it does still have the possibility of getting through a full CARB test and we will pursue that. Rising rate regs are not a perfect solution by a far shot, but in practice they work damn well, as long as our voltage clamp is installed. The kit is designed for 5-6 psi boost/ NO MORE! Without timing controls (even with them), I don't think the Protege engine will survive any substantial boost levels without new rods. The MSpeed Protege is not immune, I've heard of bone stock ones blowing up.
That said, everyone here needs bigger/better/more boost/more neon ;-) We are working with Link to bring out a plug-in ecu for the Protege with higher capabilities than anything currently out there. On-board wide band controller, full sequential, blah, blah. Plug-in, eliminate maf, install MAP, autotune off wideband. This unit will only benefit those of you that are willing to rebuild your engines to run higher boost. Just cranking up boost on stock engines, even with good fuel and timing controls will result in metallurgical litter, IMHO.
In a perfect world, we'd be able to get the development software for the stock ecu and reflash it. It's a very good ecu, just not designed with us in mind.
Our new ecu will be a Winter project. Once it's up and running and we've pulled our P5 apart to build a strong engine, it will be time to map it on our dyno.
Let the sniping begin.
As one Nick says, getting a replacement ecu through a full CARB test is damn near impossible. A friend of mine that does ecu calibration for the OEs, says it takes them five engineers for two years to come up with a calibration for one car. This might give you an idea of how difficult/time consuming/expensive it is and how unlikely it is that any of the vendors (including us, Flyin' Protege) are of making it happen.
We went with a rising rate regulator on our kit because it does still have the possibility of getting through a full CARB test and we will pursue that. Rising rate regs are not a perfect solution by a far shot, but in practice they work damn well, as long as our voltage clamp is installed. The kit is designed for 5-6 psi boost/ NO MORE! Without timing controls (even with them), I don't think the Protege engine will survive any substantial boost levels without new rods. The MSpeed Protege is not immune, I've heard of bone stock ones blowing up.
That said, everyone here needs bigger/better/more boost/more neon ;-) We are working with Link to bring out a plug-in ecu for the Protege with higher capabilities than anything currently out there. On-board wide band controller, full sequential, blah, blah. Plug-in, eliminate maf, install MAP, autotune off wideband. This unit will only benefit those of you that are willing to rebuild your engines to run higher boost. Just cranking up boost on stock engines, even with good fuel and timing controls will result in metallurgical litter, IMHO.
In a perfect world, we'd be able to get the development software for the stock ecu and reflash it. It's a very good ecu, just not designed with us in mind.
Our new ecu will be a Winter project. Once it's up and running and we've pulled our P5 apart to build a strong engine, it will be time to map it on our dyno.
Let the sniping begin.