- Mon May 23, 2016 10:56 am
#58296
If all you have done is change the silencer then you probably /do not/ need the PCV. That happens when you change the entire exhaust system and add the K&N air filter, then the ECU cannot cope. Reports from elsewhere strongly suggest the stock ECU can cope with a silencer swap.
The ECU has a narrow-band Lambda O2 sensor which can only make gross changes in mix, "make it richer" but not tell the ECU by "how much" like the wide-band Bosch O2 sensor does on the AT-200 Autotune - which is something I'm experiments with to cure popping properly and to improve cruise (which region is not covered by the supplied fuel map).
Main cause of popping after fiddling with the exhaust will be an air leak.
The inaccessible brass screw can be got at by rotating the entire throttle body towards you as per workshop manual or finding a long thin bent screwdriver. This device appears to be a form of secondary throttle to adjust idle speed, it does not enrich because it is in front of the injector but will increase air-flow through the sensor which may well cause the injector to pump more. Increasing idle a little may reduce popping, I found it made pick-up from zero throttle smoother.
However, popping may be caused by too-rich mix hitting the exhaust and going bang. When air gets in the exhaust, the sensor sees diluted and hence weak mix and so makes it all richer, doh.
The Hitchcocks PCV map does add more grunt and is smoother but does not cover the 0% and 2% throttle columns where the popping occurs, that duty is handed back to the stock ECU. It does however get the mix better for the modifications and hence does reduce popping most of the time.
I would ensure the exhaust system is sealed up tight and tweak the idle screw before buying more toys.