The MegaSquirt Project has experienced explosive growth other the years, with hundreds of new MS installations occurring every week - a phenomenal success! MegaSquirt has been successfully used in all aspects of Internal Combustion engine applications including R&D, Industry, Race, and Research. The MS project has transformed itself from a simple R&D project into a full-featured mature engine control system. To reflect this the support structure has also changed to meet the needs of MegaSquirt Users.
Moving forward, the R&D forums for MegaSquirt project are in a read-only mode - no new forum posts are accepted.
However the forums will remain available for view, they still contain a wealth of information on how MegaSquirt works, how it is installed and used. Feel free to search the forums for information, facts, and overview.While the R&D forum traffic has slowed in recent years, this is not at all a reflection of Megasquirt users, which continue to grow year after year. What has changed is that the method of MegaSquirt support today has rapidly moved to Facebook, this is where the vast majority of interaction is happening now. For those not on Facebook the msextra forums is another place for product support. Finally, for product selection assistance, all of the MegaSquirt vendors are there to help you select a system, along with all of the required pieces to make it complete.
Forum rules
Read the manual to see if your question is answered there before posting. If you have questions about MS1/Extra or MS2/Extra or other non-B&G code configuration or tuning, please post them at http://www.msextra.com The full forum rules are here: Forum Rules, be sure to read them all regularly.
My standard ECU has two fuel pump voltages - one for below certain air-flow levels and one for above. Theres a main fuel pump relay circuit (FC) and a pump speed selector line (FPR) that controls the switch between resistor'd pump feed and straight resistorless feed. Both lines are earthed when fuel pump is at top speed - can anyone see a reason not to earth both through the stock MS fuel pump control? I believe the main relay feed is diode protected but the speed selector isnt, but if they are wired in parallel they'll both benefit from the diode.
There may be a slight reduction in the lifespan of the fuelpump and perhaps a little more heat put into the fuel at low engine power levels but on the whole the system should still work fine. There are plenty of high power turbo motors running with high volume flow pumps. the nature of the system is such that as the manifold pressure drops, so does the fuel pressure. With fuel pump current being roughly proportional to fuel pressure (at least for a roller cell positive flow pump), the curent drops also, thereby achieving a form of automatic fuel pump power control..
The only major problem would be if the two-level fuel pump scheme was introduced to prevent the fuel pressure regulator from being overloaded by excessive flow rates that could mess with the fuel pressure at low engine power levels (high manifold vacuum). I would be surprised if this was the case though.
OK, thats good to hear. Not too worried about lifespan really. Surely if the pump overwhelms the regulator then, at least with the MS, you could change the VE tables to reduce the fuel delivery, at least to a certain degree?
CB wrote:...Surely if the pump overwhelms the regulator then, at least with the MS, you could change the VE tables to reduce the fuel delivery, at least to a certain degree?
Reducing the fuel delivery would INCREASE the load on the regulator.
Remember, MS is not controlling your fuel pump or your regulator, only the injectors.
No but increased load on the reg will simply lead to higher rail pressures, and therefore DC tweaks will counteract the extra flow. Bit of an itterative process but will level out somewhere.