krautastic wrote:
I'm in colorado, so at altitude. Here's where I got the info:
Quote:
With the OEM calibration, you'll find that peak boost is a pressure ratio of 2.335 bar respective to atmosphere at 2200rpm. On a boost gauge, you would see: (2.335bar - 1 bar (atm) ) * 14.7 psi/bar = 19.6245psi. In a transient maneuver you might see it spike up higher quickly, but in steady state conditions 20psi would be the max. However, at RPM climbs above 2200rpm, the boost setpoint falls off quickly, and by 3800rpm you're down to a 2.24 pressure ratio / 18.228psi.
With the GDE Eco-performance tune and the turbocharger at maximum speed limits, we have a boost setpoint that holds a 2.4 pressure ratio / 20 psi all the way from 1800rpm to 3800rpm. However, the real change is in the normal driving range where you'll see an increase, in some areas, of 5-6psi or higher.
There was never any changes to the boost setpoint that would've had customers seeing 26psi on a boost gauge - if they were, it would've been in a transient maneuver where the closed-loop boost governing wasn't reacting fast enough and allowed for an overshoot of the boost setpoint (most likely in first gear during a WOT).
http://www.greendieselengineering.com/j ... ist/7.pageWell I think that is your answer. At 6500 feet the stock tune cuts 170 mbar of pressure. So you go from 2335 mbar to 2165. That right there is 16.7 psi of boost.
If you can monitor in KPA absolute pressure instead of boost that is more similar to how the jeep is programmed. The Ecu thinks in absolute pressure, not boost.
Also, just to be safe, compare you manifold absolute pressure to you androids internal barometric pressure. They should be the same with the key on but engine off. My MAP sensor was reading 880 mbar when my phone was at 800. I swapped MAPs and it reads 800 now.
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