Hello all!
Firstly, I had a great time at the event, getting to the event, and getting home from the event! All Miata (MX5!) powered! All FreeEMS powered, too :-D
Secondly, huge thanks for Rob and Steve for hosting me, making me feel not just welcome, but also part of the team. Hugely appreciated! XXOO
Thirdly, thanks to all of the GRM staffers and volunteers and honorary contributors who made the event what it was. Good job, all!
Fourthly, it was great to meet everyone that I managed to have a decent talk with! Some pretty cool people! Keep in touch :-)
I took around 600 photos and videos over the two days and two batteries (with mains lead of charger left in Atlanta because I didn't think I'd need it) and will upload what I feel is relevant and in focus as soon as I get a chance. Some of the shots are really good, others not so much. For example, during the "town meeting" I was snapping what I could of people's faces/expressions with my zoom lense from the left rear :-) F-stop isn't great on it, so y'all had to keep still! And few did :-D Nevertheless, some came out pretty nice (IMO), so I'll share them here when I get a chance. In the mean time, my twitter account has the low-quality stuff that I took with my spare phone (scratched/dirty lense/camera), if interested. Specific (for reference) links below, generic link here: https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/ (in a week or so it'll be back to random car pictures from my fleet and other random life junk like kiwi scenery and politics, click at your own risk, below is safe)
Road trip down:
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/920907942320328704
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/920909004540346368
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921019292749049856
Challenge prep in Tampa:
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921186119940820992
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921188519766347777
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921188947124019200
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921189545680556032
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921189684709031936
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921197482167689216
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921197631635894272
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921197797835264000
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921198726668005376
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921199077219618816
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921206422465142784
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921208972039868416
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921215166259367936
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921215429367930880
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921226593485275138
Challenge in Gainesville:
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921226616344215553
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921606718668398598
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921606999606951936
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921610331880873984
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/921610635779231744
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/922214793330688001
- https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/922215215424589824
Total trip mileage: https://twitter.com/FredCookeNZ/status/922216166814289921
Selected photos from the above (for reference) links, inlined for your pleasure:
^ 295/25 tyres on 28 inch rims, LOL :-p
And last, but my no means least, quite a few people were interested in talking FreeEMS and how it could be applied to a GRM challenge car to gain control and other benefits without pushing the budget out. Hence QA at the end of the thread title. I'll try to summari(s|z)e below, but ask me anything you like, at worst I'll refuse to comment :-)
Why would you want/not want FreeEMS on your challenge car? Use this simple guide:
- If your engine is unmodified and the (free/very cheap) OEM ECU is well-understood and can be easily/quickly/cheaply made to function correctly, use it. Counter example, Maxima V6 in Mini, though he might have bigger oil pressure issues.
- If you want boost/cams/ITBs/NOS and need a degree of control, and your OEM ECU cannot be modified/adapted/tuned with free/easy solutions, then you need a standalone ECU of some sort.
- If you need a standalone ECU and your whole car has a budget of US $2000 then your choice of standalones is significantly narrowed! Even M$ systems cost around $400 US (ms1 375 and not worth using, ms2 445, near a third of your budget)
- So being able to control your engine for in the 50 to 300 USD range (IF you need it) really frees up your budget for other more important stuff like turbos and turbos and tyres (unless you're too tired).
- There are at least two ways to get the dollars low:
- 1) Buy your MS2 box second hand from craigslist or a forum seller, check it over, fix it/mod it if required, and use it.
- 2) Use FreeEMS and do something between ultra-ghetto/cheap (highest time cost, lowest $ cost) and out of the box ready as Rob/Steve did (highest $ cost, lowest time cost, but still significant time, as with any from-scratch standalone install).
- Which ever standalone (or transplanted OEM ECU!) you go with, it'll require a significant investment in time from all involved to understand it, configure it, set it up on the car, setup a laptop for it, tune it, and tweak it as needed. You need to factor this into your decision process. Counter example, I installed EFI on my SOHC 4G63 on a Friday night (fuel pump, filter, inlet manifold, throttlebody, etc), and drove it (my only car at the time) to work with a rough tune on Monday morning. By the following Friday it was running pretty well. But I know my stuff, and the car already had FreeEMS with ignition only control :-)
As for FreeEMS, there is good, bad, ugly, and indifferent. As with anything, it's not perfect. It can run most older to say early 2k engines just fine. If you're brave it can even do drive-by-wire. It's run a CBR600RR engine to 12500 RPM (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGxxafir7n0 & https://vimeo.com/81936852), and a turbo Neon engine to 20 something PSI of boost, an LT1 turbo, an RB25DET (stock CAS https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e088b5cvF_Y&t=58s), a 1UZFE on a stand (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=961alKym_B8), a 5 cylinder Volvo, a small-port 4age with ITBs to 7500 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kb0z5UHnS8), and a slew of ordinary 4 cylinders in various setups. Including Rob's street-Miata as seen around the carpark at the event and hotel. His car packs the "big block mazda" 2 litre four cylinder FE-DOHC engine, with a T3 china turbo and did 1200km odd to and from the event with a starting point of Atlanta GA. He even let me put some miles on it around Gainesville and on the way there (~3 hours) and the way back (~2 hours). Stoked! I get a huge kick out of videos like this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F5eNhSxHWKs So hook me up! :-D More info on Rob's Miata here: http://forum.diyefi.org/viewtopic.php?f=55&t=2572
FreeEMS is far from perfect, despite how well that Miata-truck BP engine ran on the weekend. Too many flaws to list, but the reality is that most of them aren't "blockers" (they don't stop you achieving good results). I guess the main negatives right now in the context of 2017 and easily available engines are:
1) RPM/safety limitations on 60-2 (BMW, Volvo, etc) and to a lesser extent 36-1 (Ford), lower tooth counts (24 crank and down) can rev as high as you need. I've personally revved a Volvo modular 6 pot in a 960 sedan to over 7000 with 60-2, but I can't hand on heart tell you it's a good idea.
2) No variable VVT support, yet. It's not difficult to implement, it's just that none of my 13.5 cars and 30 or 40 personal engines have VVT on them. A few have on/off VVT, which is trivial to do with existing generic functionality, but nothing with PWM style PID position control, so far. Buy me an engine-on-stand setup with this feature, and I'll get it done for you :-)
Another issue (from a FOSS purist perspective) is that some of the better (IMO) PC software is not free (as in speech) however I do let good people use it for free (as in beer) for the time being (unlikely to change before 2018 challenge). The tuning software is pretty bad, but works well enough since a different kiwi-Rob and I put in some time just before the last challenge to make it usable for Rob and Steve on tetanus.
If you are considering using it, on a challenge car, or otherwise, then please don't try to go it alone. Instead, it's MUCH better to work with the regulars closely to expedite your route to success.
Cheers, Fred.