E85 tuning
I'm not here to start another, "why e85 isn't worth it," thread either.
Thus take all the injector flow informaiton and multiply it by .75. This is a cheap and easy way to do it. Essentially the PCM thinks your injectors are smaller then they really are, and will give it more fuel.
I've done it both this way and trying to make a tune from scratch to run on e85. Trust me, doing the injector method is the easy way.
Thus take all the injector flow informaiton and multiply it by .75. This is a cheap and easy way to do it. Essentially the PCM thinks your injectors are smaller then they really are, and will give it more fuel.
I've done it both this way and trying to make a tune from scratch to run on e85. Trust me, doing the injector method is the easy way.
Change the Stoich ratio to get fueling correct. The best method is to get a tester to find the E content of the fuel and then use the corresponding stoich ratio in the tune to match your fuel type.
Even once this adjustment is made you will still need to go over your airflow tables to get them within error just due to the differences in burn rate, efficiency etc. You'll also have to tune your timing tables to taylor to the better fuel. The biggest thing is make sure all your fuel components are up to the task. You'll def need larger than stock injectors and fuel pump and lines will need to be E85 compatible.
Just change the stoich, and start by adding about 3-4* of timing.
Just change the stoich, and start by adding about 3-4* of timing.
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Change the Stoich ratio to get fueling correct. The best method is to get a tester to find the E content of the fuel and then use the corresponding stoich ratio in the tune to match your fuel type.
Even once this adjustment is made you will still need to go over your airflow tables to get them within error just due to the differences in burn rate, efficiency etc. You'll also have to tune your timing tables to taylor to the better fuel. The biggest thing is make sure all your fuel components are up to the task. You'll def need larger than stock injectors and fuel pump and lines will need to be E85 compatible.

In reality it is much easier for most to switch to lambda, because air/fuel ratio's will confuse people who are not use to them. Me personally I have and like using a gas air/fuel ratio to tune everything with, because this is how I have done it for the last 10 years. Plus a lot of gauges only read on gas air/fuel, thus my lc-1 will always show 14.7 no matter what fuel is being used, but cause that is lambda of 1.
There is more than one way to skin a cat.
Also unless you are a top tier tuner going for some sort of record you don't really need to get a tester and test every batch of e85. I have done that. Are their variances? yes, but they won't make enough of a difference. Set the tune up a little rich and run it that way. E85 is much more forgiving than gas, and you can run much richer and much leaner than gas with less affects.
Just my $.02 from tuning many different engines on e85 over the years.
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I do everything in Lambda because of all the different fuel types I tune, def makes life easier.
Change the Stoich ratio to get fueling correct. The best method is to get a tester to find the E content of the fuel and then use the corresponding stoich ratio in the tune to match your fuel type.
Even once this adjustment is made you will still need to go over your airflow tables to get them within error just due to the differences in burn rate, efficiency etc. You'll also have to tune your timing tables to taylor to the better fuel. The biggest thing is make sure all your fuel components are up to the task. You'll def need larger than stock injectors and fuel pump and lines will need to be E85 compatible.






