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By tompas11
#92571
Actually I made my own booster plug and fitted it to my 2018 Classic 500.
I now have a much smoother throttle response, it's not that snatchy as it was before.
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By Usabikes
#92641
I fitted a Boosterplug to my previous bike (Yamaha MT-01) and the change was immediate and dramatic. Immediate cut in vibrations (lean mixtures apparently do this) and much cleaner low speed throttle response.

Possible downside is I didn't have it for more than a couple of tankfuls and I have read that the electronics adjust to the BP after a while and things revert back to the way they were. Do your research I suppose...
By tompas11
#92673
Well I'm been riding 700 km with my homemade BP by now and it still works like a charm. BP only works when you change engine speed up or down (open loop). When riding at constant speed the ECU receives signals from the lambda, [oxygen sensor] and goes into closed loop.
By Rattlebattle
#92684
Yes, on a lot of modern bikes the EFI has a long term trim ie it adapts over time. it will always try to pull back the mixture to stoichmetric, which gives theoretical complete combustion is is too lean for optimum power and smooth running. These days though most manufacturers have pretty well solved the issues of hesitation off idle, something car makers did ages ago. Euro IV bikes were supposed to have full OBD2 ports by now, so that fault codes etc can be read by any OBD2 compliant reader. However, according to a recent article in Bike Magazine, bike makers have not been able to solve the issue of a "fault" showing because the ECU detects a "misfire". It seems that bikes have too much vibration and are subject more to road shocks than cars, triggering apparent faults as though the engine is misfiring. So the legal requirement to have OBD2 ports and do away with proprietary ones so that anyone can fault read has been put back. Shame. My Triumph has what I thought is an OBD2 port. It is, in than the cable fits and works fine with TuneEcu, but apparently it's not fully OBD2 compliant, presumable lacking the misfire detection fault triggering element. Meanwhile, back in India, they've just discovered that poor wiring and cheap sensors affect EFI.....
By Breezin
#92689
This chap in Italy has a solution cheaper than a branded booster plug, with a convincing (to me) explanation of how it works. I have no idea if it is indeed snake oil, but it has had positive expert endorsement elsewhere...
Translation required: https://www.belinassu.it/396108570
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By Doug Brown
#93350
In an attempt to fix a stutter on a 650 bmw single I fitted one. Initially I detected a difference but over time it felt as if It wasn't working anymore. I took it off when I fitted a booster allowing me to change the fuel mapping via a laptop. Stuttering was caused by a lazy O2 sensor. I was one of the people who rode the prototype efi bullets and told them that the O2 sensor needed moving to where it is now. Originally it was just before the silencer.
Most sensors work on variable resistance and the booster plug is a resistor that fools the cpu into thinking the air is cooler and requires more fuel.
By Andy C
#93352
tompas11 - lets see the schematic then...........
By Patrickd11
#93401
trophyvase wrote:
Mon Aug 10, 2020 11:36 am
I've run mine on snake oil for years and never had a seizure yet conditions isolation 1€! :roll:

But the Booster is an electronic component and best kept well away from oil of any sort. ;)
It is more judicious I find. And it also allows you to really take advantage of the tool.
By Harald
#93469
I was curious if such a modification would be of some value. So I made my own temperature sensor, based on the information given in the video.
And I have to agree - after installation the engine runs more much better. The idle is more stable and when accelerating from the middle speed range the difference is significant. Before changing the temperature sensor, the engine was not really willing to accelerate and vibrations were increased when turning the throttle. After installing the new sensor, the engine runs much smoother and acceleration is more even. I will not say all engines will behave the same way as my engine is a little bit a “special one” (of a doubtful quality from factory), but for me the new temperature sensor is a big improvement and I can recommend it.

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