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Vit's FI TT 370Z Lives!

Originally Posted by VitViper The goal of any good TC system is to run the car at the limit at the tire without hurting acceleration. The M1 does this with

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Old 09-16-2016, 11:48 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by VitViper View Post
The goal of any good TC system is to run the car at the limit at the tire without hurting acceleration. The M1 does this with ease.

The stock ECU sucks at this, as it's designed to keep you from wrecking and nothing more.

ECUTek will never touch the logic in the motec, I've already spent a lot of time adjusting settings and with a turbo car you'll still spin the tire (especially 1st gear) even if you pull AALL the timing out of it (this motor just makes a ton of torque with twins lol). I have an intricate timing + throttle pull on my ECUTek map, the results are "meh" and nowhere near optimal. Better than the stock VDC, but not even 1% of a motec, lol



Yes this will in at least one facet -- you can setup a shift light module in the car to let you know when you're at 9k or higher -- the stock tach goes to 9k but the CAN bus RPM data only goes to 8400, trust me. lol

Beyond that I can't really answer that -- everyone has their own goals and needs. I just converted an 07 Civic Si to an M1 and built the car a dual fuel system firmware package for the ECU -- goes between E85 and M5 fuel at the flip of a switch in the car (4 cylinder 2.5L motor with 8 injectors, 2 pumps, 2 regulators. eg, two complete and segregated fuel systems run by the ECU based on driver demand).
So if I am understanding this right then it sound like your controlling traction based of a predetermined allowable toque output so you never break traction in the first place? Vs a conventional system that is all cause and effect (slip then react). So wouldn't you need to recalculate your table everytime there is a change (tire, track, weather etc.)?
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