- Wed Jan 13, 2016 10:08 am
#54198
Thack, unfortunately I can't give you what you're asking but will add a little something purely for amusement value.
The Triumph EFI Twins like the Enfield have a less than comprehensive Keihin system. The Triumph set-up will have the engine running rich enough to create large sooty deposits in the exhaust pipe if the removable rubber cap used to seal the Manometer stub either developed a split or was not fully replaced after balancing the injector bodies. In these circumstances the TPS value remains low/unchanged but an artificially lower than expected MAP value is introduced.
I haven't any OEM Triumph fuel maps to hand to check, only other peoples along with my own collection but at tick-over speeds the non-load pulse widths across these maps never exceeds 3.4ms. The only thing that does noticeably change is the amount of ignition advance which increases as engine speed decreases beyond lower than recommended tick-over speeds.
So either the ECU is switching across to the load fuel map when the tick-over sensor readings are outside of expected parameters to utilise its wider pulse widths, or there is something in addition to the fuel maps written in the ECU programming that can interfere with injector pulse width.
So perhaps having an excessively loose air port cable (instead of loose enough to ensure the port seal is never lifted off its seat unintentionally) would mean that when the handlebar lever is fully moved through its arc it could result in the air port only being opened a tiny amount instead of fully thus duplicating the Keihin/Triumph split rubber quandary. If this hypothesis is correct then in some instances on some bikes using the BI-Starter would result in a richer mixture.
The Triumph EFI Twins like the Enfield have a less than comprehensive Keihin system. The Triumph set-up will have the engine running rich enough to create large sooty deposits in the exhaust pipe if the removable rubber cap used to seal the Manometer stub either developed a split or was not fully replaced after balancing the injector bodies. In these circumstances the TPS value remains low/unchanged but an artificially lower than expected MAP value is introduced.
I haven't any OEM Triumph fuel maps to hand to check, only other peoples along with my own collection but at tick-over speeds the non-load pulse widths across these maps never exceeds 3.4ms. The only thing that does noticeably change is the amount of ignition advance which increases as engine speed decreases beyond lower than recommended tick-over speeds.
So either the ECU is switching across to the load fuel map when the tick-over sensor readings are outside of expected parameters to utilise its wider pulse widths, or there is something in addition to the fuel maps written in the ECU programming that can interfere with injector pulse width.
So perhaps having an excessively loose air port cable (instead of loose enough to ensure the port seal is never lifted off its seat unintentionally) would mean that when the handlebar lever is fully moved through its arc it could result in the air port only being opened a tiny amount instead of fully thus duplicating the Keihin/Triumph split rubber quandary. If this hypothesis is correct then in some instances on some bikes using the BI-Starter would result in a richer mixture.