Entai said:I was under the impression that as long as the engine had a knock (detonation) sensor then the ECU would constantly change the timing untill it was just on the limit of detonation thus always maximising the power available.
So no matter what the ECU was originally mapped for if you add a higher octane rated fuel, the ECU, via the Knock sensor, will automatically advance the engine timing to account for the fact that higher octane rated fuel will not detonate as readily at advanced timings, thus you will get better perfomance and more power.
Conversely if you have a low octane fuel the ECU will back off the timing so you will loose power and performance.
Entai said:I was under the impression that as long as the engine had a knock (detonation) sensor then the ECU would constantly change the timing untill it was just on the limit of detonation thus always maximising the power available.
So no matter what the ECU was originally mapped for if you add a higher octane rated fuel, the ECU, via the Knock sensor, will automatically advance the engine timing to account for the fact that higher octane rated fuel will not detonate as readily at advanced timings, thus you will get better perfomance and more power.
Conversely if you have a low octane fuel the ECU will back off the timing so you will loose power and performance.
Clarkey said:lol no way, that would be very dangerous, driving the engine into detonation all the time would probably give it a life of about 1000 miles
Besides which, running the ignition timing advanced to the point just before knock occurs will not give you maximum power anyway. There is a band between optimal power and knock where you can add advance but with no power gain and simply reduce the margin for safety. This band happens to be smaller on a turbo engine than an NA though.
Either way, knock sensors are there purely as a safety device, most will retard the base ignition timing if they detect knock, and thats it.
Clarkey said:not heard of that, how does that work then?
Entai said:I was wondering that as well no-one here has ever heard of spark plugs detecting knock???
Knock control
A high compression ratio is favourable for engine efficiency and thereby fuel consumption. The tendency of the engine to knock increases with the compression ratio, however, so a compression ratio is selected that is as high as possible with regard to the knock resistance of the engine's recommended fuel. Knock control in modern engines is not a safety function but a normal one. Therefore, there is nothing wrong with knock control being active during normal operation.
Trionic T7 does not have a conventional knock sensor. Instead, the ignition discharge module analyses the ionization current across the spark plug gap on all cylinders and sends a knock signal from each cylinder to control module pin 38.
From the combustion signals, the control module will be aware of which cylinder has fired and if a knock signal above a certain level is registered at the same time by the control module, it will gradually retard the ignition for the cylinder in question until the knocking ceases. Timing correction then returns slowly to zero.
Note
To ensure optimal engine performance, the correct spark plug should be used for each respective engine type. See Technical data, Spark plugs (157).
If the mean value of the ignition retardation on all cylinder exceeds a certain level, fuel enrichment will take place. If the mean value of the ignition retardation on all cylinders increases further despite fuel enrichment, the maximum permissible air mass/combustion will be limited.
The control module expects the knock signal to be at a certain level as the spark is produced, so it will therefore start the actual knock detection in the respective cylinder only after the spark has been produced.
merlin said:No idea how you guys can say you can feel the extra power.
I mean cmon - what extra bhp are you getting? 1%? 2%? 20%?
merlin said:No idea how you guys can say you can feel the extra power.
I mean cmon - what extra bhp are you getting? 1%? 2%? 20%?