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-   -   OBD2 tool (https://www.fuelly.com/forums/f8/obd2-tool-3149.html)

MetroMPG 10-15-2006 12:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DRW
I wonder what sort of tests MetroMPG will come up with using his new logger? Any plans yet?

- It'll let me look more closely at things like my hot air intake.

DRW 10-15-2006 06:27 PM

Thanks for posting the links. In the first link to the WAI test you said,"Why doesn't it show up in the results? Perhaps because:

The throttle is open slightly wider, and the effective load is higher. The ECU may be compensating by enriching the mixture."

There is a direct link between engine load and timing. As load increases the ecu will reduce timing. This could be why the WAI didn't work, you had to open the throttle more and that put you down on a lower timing level. So what's more efficient, a stoich mixture with high timing or a lean mixture with low timing? The answer lies in your datalogger.

What would be really cool is if your logger lets you analyze the data in a statistical way, like a 2 way ANOVA. That way you could plug in IAT on one axis and anything else on the other axis and see if there is any correlation. How about IAT vs. fuel trim? IAT vs. O2 readings? Or?

MetroMPG 10-15-2006 06:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DRW
The answer lies in your datalogger.

You said it, man.

Quote:

Originally Posted by DRW
What would be really cool is if your logger lets you analyze the data in a statistical way, like a 2 way ANOVA.

Sorry. What the heck's ANOVA? Edumacate me please.

DRW 10-15-2006 07:17 PM

ANalysis Of VAriance. It's a statistics term. It lets you see relationships between two variables even when the two variables are constantly varying. :D
Clear as mud?;)

MetroMPG 10-15-2006 07:19 PM

Makes sense.

rh77 10-16-2006 03:55 AM

Stat Progs
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by DRW
ANalysis Of VAriance. It's a statistics term. It lets you see relationships between two variables even when the two variables are constantly varying. :D
Clear as mud?;)

All I've used in such an application is SPSS for stats. Is there recommended freeware out there that will run statistical applications?

RH77

MetroMPG 10-16-2006 04:40 AM

I'd love to have some SPSS freeware.

---

Got e-mail from the seller: unit shipped this AM air mail. Should have it in 7-14 days. The only unknown is customs fees. That's always hit & miss with international packages. Sometimes I get hit, sometimes I don't.

onegammyleg 10-16-2006 05:00 AM

Hi MetroMPG -¨Sometimes I get hit, sometimes I don't.¨

Consider yourself lucky.
Here every non EU package will get taxed , even gifts from relatives if the customs dept think the value is over $20., and because postage is added to this valu'ing method it means almost everything gets taxed.

DRW 10-16-2006 07:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rh77
All I've used in such an application is SPSS for stats. Is there recommended freeware out there that will run statistical applications?

RH77

Not that I'm aware of. One of my loggers includes a neat graphing function where I can plug in any two variables and see where each datapoint lies. I find it helpful when looking for relationships between two variables as the datapoints tend to form clusters, lines or scatter. I tried to get a screenshot of it last night, but the log viewer doesn't seem to support it.

I have a feeling the new OBDII logger will give you plenty of data to crunch. Some sort of statistical tool can be useful if the data becomes overwhelming.

MetroMPG 10-23-2006 09:56 AM

Nerd alert update: OBD2 tool arrived. I'll hopefully give it a try this evening and report back.

I saw the same tool sell for $10 less on eBay this week ($45 shipped). So if it works, might be one to watch for.

EDIT: PS, didn't get hit with duty. Nice.


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