Quote:
Originally Posted by RETed
Overboost fuel-cut has been programmed in every stock ECU at approximately 1psi over stock levels.
This basically means just a little higher boost will trigger it.
Some stock S5's with stock ECU's have never been known to hit overboost fuel-cut even when obviously going way over stock boost levels.
(S4's, OTOH, will always hit overboost fuel cut at ~6.5psi.)
No FCD (fuel-cut defensor) or any other electronics that's molesting the stock boost sensor signal was obviously found...
We don't know why this is the case.
We can't seem to find a pattern with ECU part numbers either.
Some claim that if the car hits the overboost fuel-cut enough, it somehow disables the stock programming - I can't confirm nor deny any of this.
FCD's are cheap (i.e. Racing Beat), so it's really no excuse not to use one.
There's even a DYI version posted on the INet if you're good at handling electronics.
-Ted
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Interesting, although I doubt the inconsistency is an intentional "feature" of the S5 ECU code as some would claim. Reasons being: (1) State of the art in OEM HW/SW technology probably wasn't up to the task back in the late '80s, and (2) Implementing it this way (i.e., disable fuel cut feature after "X" overboost events) runs counter to what a responsible company who warranties their product would do -- they would be opening themselves up to liability claims. If owner's were routinely overboosting their new FC's for whatever reason, and then the the fuel cut feature suddenly stopped intervening after "X" events, what would convince the dunderhead behind the wheel to return his FC to Mazda for service? If this is an intentional feature of the S5 ECU code, I think Mazda would have opted to enable the "limp home" mode after "X" overboost events, similar to what it does for electronic OMP faults.
My guess is that somewhere in the S5 production run, Mazda intentionally altered the ECU programming (overboost thresholds and/or fuel cut behavior) and didn't bother to change part numbers. Or if the ECU production & programming was farmed out to a subcontractor, the sub may have made the change unknown to Mazda.