I Hear Many People Quoting Fuel Economies That Sound, Impossible Unless They Are Towing Downhill With A Tail Wind The Whole Time.
Any Truck With A Electronic Trip Computer That Calculates Fuel Economy And Also Has A Performance Chip, The Displayed Fuel Economy Will Be Incorrect.
The Computer In The Truck Calculates The Fuel Economy (mpg) By Tracking Fuel Consumption In The Following Manner:
The Pcm Sets The Fuel Injection Pulse Width And Pressure Based On A "look-up Table" That Takes Into Account Rpm, Throttle Position And Several Other Variables. The Pressure, Timing And Pulse Width Are All Hard Wired Into The "look-up Table" In The Pcm.
The Fuel Economy (displayed On The Overhead Console) Is Calcualted From The Distance Traveled And The Volume Of Fuel That Is Sprayed Into The Cylinders As Per The Specifications Hard Wired Into The Pcm Look-up Table. The Computer Knows The Exact Volume That Gets Sprayed Each Power Stroke.
Now Here Is Where The Problem Comes From:
The Performance Chips Intercept The Serial Data Stream From The Pcm That Tells The Fpcm How Much Fuel To Inject (and When For Timing) And Modifys The Pulse Width And Timing Data With Settings From An Alternate Look-up Table Contained In The Aftermarket Module. The Truck Pcm And Truck Trip Computer With Average And Instant Milage Is Still Calculating Your "assumed" Fuel Economy When The Truck Is Reallly Spraying More Fuel Into The Engine That The Stock Pcm Called For. This Is Why A Lot Of People Think Their Milage Is Higher Than Really Is.
Fuel Milage Needs To Be Hand Calculated If You Have A Performance Chip. Your Stock Pcm Is Being Fooled Into Thinking That You Are Running With Different Fuel Timing And Different Injector Pulse Width.
This Informaiton Is Directly From A Design Engineer At Edge Performance.
If Anyone Has Any Questions Or Comments, Please Post Them And I Will Answer.
BY THE WAY, I HAVE A 2005 2500 DUALLY 6 SPEED ST QUAD CAB NOW, THE INFO BELOW SHOWS MY OLD TRUCK
Any Truck With A Electronic Trip Computer That Calculates Fuel Economy And Also Has A Performance Chip, The Displayed Fuel Economy Will Be Incorrect.
The Computer In The Truck Calculates The Fuel Economy (mpg) By Tracking Fuel Consumption In The Following Manner:
The Pcm Sets The Fuel Injection Pulse Width And Pressure Based On A "look-up Table" That Takes Into Account Rpm, Throttle Position And Several Other Variables. The Pressure, Timing And Pulse Width Are All Hard Wired Into The "look-up Table" In The Pcm.
The Fuel Economy (displayed On The Overhead Console) Is Calcualted From The Distance Traveled And The Volume Of Fuel That Is Sprayed Into The Cylinders As Per The Specifications Hard Wired Into The Pcm Look-up Table. The Computer Knows The Exact Volume That Gets Sprayed Each Power Stroke.
Now Here Is Where The Problem Comes From:
The Performance Chips Intercept The Serial Data Stream From The Pcm That Tells The Fpcm How Much Fuel To Inject (and When For Timing) And Modifys The Pulse Width And Timing Data With Settings From An Alternate Look-up Table Contained In The Aftermarket Module. The Truck Pcm And Truck Trip Computer With Average And Instant Milage Is Still Calculating Your "assumed" Fuel Economy When The Truck Is Reallly Spraying More Fuel Into The Engine That The Stock Pcm Called For. This Is Why A Lot Of People Think Their Milage Is Higher Than Really Is.
Fuel Milage Needs To Be Hand Calculated If You Have A Performance Chip. Your Stock Pcm Is Being Fooled Into Thinking That You Are Running With Different Fuel Timing And Different Injector Pulse Width.
This Informaiton Is Directly From A Design Engineer At Edge Performance.
If Anyone Has Any Questions Or Comments, Please Post Them And I Will Answer.
BY THE WAY, I HAVE A 2005 2500 DUALLY 6 SPEED ST QUAD CAB NOW, THE INFO BELOW SHOWS MY OLD TRUCK
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