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-   -   M103 EHA/Lambda Adjustment HELP (http://www.peachparts.com/shopforum/tech-help/47986-m103-eha-lambda-adjustment-help.html)

LarryBible 10-11-2002 09:27 AM

Robert,

Congrats on a job well done. It sounds like you're ready for the ASE test!

Have a great day,

Cap'n Carageous 10-11-2002 09:45 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by TCCBass
l...after I removed the resistor for timing and with this adjustment the car runs like it did before I bought it.

You lost me there, can you elaborate on that comment?:confused:

TCCBass 10-11-2002 12:09 PM

Capt...

I removed the little resistor that's attached to the A/C line. It's the one that compensates for lower octane fuel. I use ONLY 92 octane, so I removed it.

The car is driving SO well. I can pull out without fear now.

LarryBible 10-11-2002 12:44 PM

Cap'n,

Robert is referring to the ignition advance resistor that is discussed to death in the Performance Paddock.

The long and short of it is; there is a resistor ty wrapped to the a/c line near the master cylinder. When you remove it, you add 6 degrees ignition advance. On Euro cars there is a rotary switch that allows adjustment for varying octanes. On the US cars, this resistor retards the maximum ignition advance for emmissions reasons.

There is no real downside to removing it because these engines have a knock sensor that prevents preignition problems.

My $0.02,

LarryBible 10-11-2002 03:00 PM

I've been meaning to mention this with every post I've made in this thread and continue to forget.

If you don't have a duty cycle meter, but you DO have an old dwell meter, you can substitute the dwell meter for the duty cycle meter when setting the lambda adjustment. You simply look for mid scale on the dwell meter. All a dwell meter is, is a duty cycle meter marked up in degrees instead of %.

Have a great day,

Cap'n Carageous 10-11-2002 03:34 PM

Thanks Larry!
 
I had gone back in a search and found that info. On the dwell meter subject.. What numerical readings would you look for on the scale, 45-55 degrees? I have an old Sun dwell meter, let's see... I loaned to my friend Clark back in 1984 I think! :D

LarryBible 10-11-2002 04:15 PM

You will be looking for half scale which is 50% duty cycle. For example. For a four cylinder, max scale will be 90 degrees. This means that 45 degrees on the four cylinder scale will be 50% duty cycle.

I actually dug out an old Dwell meter and experimented with it. It was reading exactly center scale on my 300E pin 3. I didn't know whether or not to trust it at the time, so I bought the $27 meter. It confirmed that my lambda was set at 50%. This gave me confidence in using the dwell meter, but now I had the duty cycle meter so I didn't need it.

Hope this helps,


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