Quote:
Originally Posted by Barry Bordes
The sensor specs are ±1% for Combustion.
The timing trigger that I fabricated adjacent to Mazda’s timing wheel would be the area for greatest possible error.
To check this a test run is then made where the engine ignition is cut at 6000 rpm and the throttle is opened fully. This double-checks TDC in relation to the logged actual compression hump.
To my knowledge the rest are calculations.
|
By sensor specs for combustion do you mean the transducers? Out of curiousity how did you calibrate your transducers? Did they calibrate them for you and ship them with a cert of it (sorry for the questions, it's the engineer in me again--we've been repeatedly told "never trust some one elses calibration unless you absolutely have to"). Would I be correct in assuming the sensors are linear in nature until a certain point, or are they non-linear from min-read to max? (out of curiosity do you know what the resolution of your timing sensor is? ie: can it read only 1 degree or can it read minutes, or seconds?)
If you know the calculations they're running for any given reading you can easily perturb the uncertainties to get a culmulative percentage of error. That way you can at least know the accuracy of your results. From my glances you could be on the mark or you could be slightly off. Without the error it's hard to gage application to different stress/repeatabilty.