
ENSMR2 wrote:So which cylinders should be run richer? Or will that depend on the individual build/setup etc?


To be honest, it'd be guesswork unless you had an EGT gauge per cylinder, but more ideally a way of reading lambda for each cylinder

(not easy to do, as the temps at the points where you'd be trying to measure lambda for each cylinder will be too much for a sensor for any extended amount of time).

I guess if you were a WRC team

(or other top level motorsport outfit) you might consider doing this, as it would mean you could map each cylinder to be fueling just spot on so that you extract every last ounce of power out of the engine, but to be fair, the said teams would likely have the engine absolutely balanced for flow and such things to within a nat's whisker so they probably wouldn't need to have all these individual cylinder sensors to start with.

In the real world, you'd just run a bit richer than the optimum, which on a turbo engine happens to be 12.4:1

(very few tuners map in the 12s, though).

The Americans generally map in the high 11s and sometimes the 10s

(most widebands don't read richer 10s, so you don't want to overdo it).

Yeah, got something right lol.


Mate, you're showing more logic here than most!

Incidentally, looking at the US MoTeC site, it appears that even the base MoTeC M4 ECU can do individual cylinder trimming, but needs the

"advanced tuning" option enabled

(at extra cost, about

£250 last time I checked).

Here's the quote from their site:


The Advanced Tuning Option gives many extra features including traction control, the ability to configure the ECU to your existing sensors, user definable load and rpm sites, 512Kb of on board data logging, Fuel Secondary Load Table, 3D Individual Cylinder Trim tables, Acceleration Advance, 3D Dwell time table, Traction Control and Launch Control, Wideband Lambda Control, Gear Change Ignition Cut, Anti-lag, Gear Detection and Ground Speed Limiting.


Personally, I don't think that's totally correct though, as you can configure the ECU for many different sensors WITHOUT the advanced option AFAIK.
