The MegaSquirt Project has experienced explosive growth other the years, with hundreds of new MS installations occurring every week - a phenomenal success! MegaSquirt has been successfully used in all aspects of Internal Combustion engine applications including R&D, Industry, Race, and Research. The MS project has transformed itself from a simple R&D project into a full-featured mature engine control system. To reflect this the support structure has also changed to meet the needs of MegaSquirt Users.
Moving forward, the R&D forums for MegaSquirt project are in a read-only mode - no new forum posts are accepted.
However the forums will remain available for view, they still contain a wealth of information on how MegaSquirt works, how it is installed and used. Feel free to search the forums for information, facts, and overview.While the R&D forum traffic has slowed in recent years, this is not at all a reflection of Megasquirt users, which continue to grow year after year. What has changed is that the method of MegaSquirt support today has rapidly moved to Facebook, this is where the vast majority of interaction is happening now. For those not on Facebook the msextra forums is another place for product support. Finally, for product selection assistance, all of the MegaSquirt vendors are there to help you select a system, along with all of the required pieces to make it complete.
Forum rules Read the manual to see if your question is answered there before posting. Many users will not reply if the answer is already available in the manual.
If your question is about troubleshooting, configuration, or tuning, you MUST include your processor type (MS-I or MS-II) and code version in your post. If your question is about PCB assembly or modifications, you must also include the main board version number (1.01, 2.2 or 3.0). For tuning/troubleshooting questions, please attached a datalog and your MSQ file to your post.
I have been looking in the Megamanual but have not found if it possible to use coolant temperature to cut fuel or retard timing such as the rev limiter can do. Can anyone direct me on this issue?
The only way fuel is affected by coolant temp is during warmup. However, you might be able to add an extra temperature to the coolant temp array, say 200 deg F when you normally run 180 deg F at operating temperature. Then the engine would stay in permanent warmup mode, but you would set the correction factor at that temperature to 100% (no correction). Then if it ever went past 180 the correction factor for the 200 deg point would start coming into play and you could set it to a low correction (even 0). If you wanted an instant correction you could add 2 points, say 198 and 200, then you could set it up to do nothing at 198 then go to 0 (fuel cut) at 200). I don't know what staying in permanent warmup mode would do in other areas, but you could try this.
Spark retard is similar. There is an extra advance for spark when coolant is cold and it generally goes to 0 as you reach operating temperature. It uses the same coolant temp array as above, so you could do the same thing with spark, set the correction to 0 deg at 180, then put in -deg retard at 200 deg. However, you might have to modify the ini file to allow you to use negative numbers, I'm not sure.