M42club.com - Home of the BMW E30/E36 318i/iS
DISCUSSION => Engine + Driveline => Topic started by: spanish_pants on December 12, 2011, 03:54:52 AM
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Well gentlemen that is the question. Mine has been tampered with by the previous owner, and then by a less than knowledgable shop after i added some mustang injectors.
I need to get it back to stock so i can get the new chip working properly with the new injectors.
Thanks!
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Sounds like a good idea...but there's a possibility that they were all separately calibrated.
I'll see if I can dig up more info. It's a voltage curve that they put out, I'll bet Bosch calibrated them on a flow bench.
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desktop is correct, they were all separately calibrated at the factory.
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Really? would it be best to just get a new one or have it adjusted to work with the new chip and injectors?
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The best way to get it back to stock, would be to run the stock chip, remove stock lambda sensor, and have someone hook up a LM2 or equivalent sensor to measure the exhaust gas. Adjust spring till you see 13.5 AFR, then you can stick your performance chip and injectors in.
All the best!
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My advice is to find one at a junk yard that doesn't appear to be tampered with, and use that. If you are feeling like spending money, you can get a Python Injection rebuilt one, and send in yours for a core refund. It may run you around $200.
Otherwise, you will need a wide-band O2 sensor and some trial & error to get this one close to its original calibration. Sorry it isn't a cheap, easy answer!
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The best way to get it back to stock, would be to run the stock chip, remove stock lambda sensor, and have someone hook up a LM2 or equivalent sensor to measure the exhaust gas. Adjust spring till you see 13.5 AFR, then you can stick your performance chip and injectors in.
All the best!
Right now iīm not running the chip. In order to get it to work properly i need to install an o2 sensor, but i am running the mustang injectors. With out an o2 sensor these were running rich, hence the previous afm adjustment.
I think iīll go back to stock and take youre advice as a first option as it seems the most cost effective route. If this fails then iīll just go with a new or rebuilt afm.
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My advice is to find one at a junk yard that doesn't appear to be tampered with, and use that. If you are feeling like spending money, you can get a Python Injection rebuilt one, and send in yours for a core refund. It may run you around $200.
Otherwise, you will need a wide-band O2 sensor and some trial & error to get this one close to its original calibration. Sorry it isn't a cheap, easy answer!
Itīs tough to find these at a JY, as there are very few isīs and what there is has been sitting there under the elements for years. Letīs see if my first option pans out.
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I'll bet there are a few equivalents...my E34 525i had a very similar AFM, I wouldn't be surprised if it was exactly the same. The updated later round connector is the only change that's significant.
http://bmwfans.info/parts/catalog/13627558785/
All the M42 & M44 units are interchangeable according to the BMWFans x-ref above.