from what i have heard from some on here. running no egr on a us ecu will make you run a little lean at mid throttle to about 3/4 throttle. it this true.
NeatOman;1095963 said:Removing the EGR i think is a good idea if you want to run the car hotter under normal conditions witch is favorable because it will run with in temp spec better and revent carbon buildup much better, because after all the EGR is meant to reduce operating temp and prevent NOx (smog). And of course no more crap on your intake vales!
And I agree.. You will need a JDM ECU. I would guess it runs lean because exhaust gases have a lot of unburnt fuel, the best new cars only burn up to ~30% of the fuel in the cylinder.
ForcedTorque;1095990 said:Jdub, I have never seen you post anything about fuel mileage when you talk about this subject. I would assume the JDM would increase fuel a bit, and thus have slightly less fuel economy.
jdub;1095999 said:That's a good question Scott...I don't know how it would affect MPG.
I am sure timing is different. Dean Marcum posted this on the SOGI mailing list a while back:
http://www.supras.com/pipermail/supras_supras.com/2004-February/002466.html
What is interesting is that it looks like timing is advanced on the JDM ECU...with no EGR, that would make pinging more likely. Dean saw this, but he was also running well above stock boost and it was above 4000 RPM where the EGR is cut off on USDM ECUs.
figgie;1096994 said:well I will adress this as jdub has not
EGR in all actuallity helps in increasing gas mileage when the tune accounts for it.
Honda knows this so much so that they tend to run 30% egr at light throttle to do a couple of things.
1. Detonation supresession
2. Decrease pumping losses
3. Effectivly DECREASE the displacement of the engine by the 30% that motor is reinjesting.
on the Honda Insight.
That comes with a 1.0L engine. Decrease the effective displacement by 30% and you are now at a paultry 700cc engine.
The same DOES apply to the supra
3.0L engine that has been tuned with light load/cruise EGR useage in mind and you are talking a 2098 cc engine (2.1L) with pumping losses minimized (using a higher VE).
Remember
Exhaust gases are inert.
jdub
check this out
http://www.autospeed.com/cms/A_110577/article.html
those aussies know thier stuff!
and finally
mahle
http://www.mahle.com/C125713200619F8F/CurrentBaseLink/W276SEUW250MARSEN
notice the title of the article.
jdub;1097107 said:Damn good info Figgie...confirms a lot of the other aspects of what the EGR does too