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.
This is the forum to discuss the MegaStim, which provides a simulated environment to test your MegaSquirt® controller, as well as Jeff Corsaro's stim breakout PC board.
is there a link to where it shows what the Stim is supposed to do when hooked up to my MS and turning the knobs. IE: and explanation on which led's light up when?
I think it would be a nice feature for the next revision of the stimulator to add some (optional to install) self-diag indicators. A single LED to function as a heartbeat from the timer circuit would be nice - even better would be one that blinked at a frequency that varied according to the RPM pot. Yes, this can be done with the LED probe, but for the added cost of components it might as well be built into the board. A low battery LED might be a worthwhile addition too.
The recommendation is for newbies to build the stimulator first, but the stimulator doesn't do anything unless it's plugged into a MS. The heartbeat or RPM LED would at least give some indication the stim is doing something. The low battery LED would just be a handy thing for those situations where someone is trying to troubleshoot a problem, but they're forced to run the stim off of battery.
I'm still at info. gathering stage (hav'nt bought anything yet), but I did built a signal generator as a small electronics projet.
The way I used to test this (and how any electronic device should be tested for all I care) is with an osciloscope.
The one I used, can be bought for about $100, it's a software that uses your PC's sound card to interpret signals, it has two channels and is plenty accurate for automotive grade electronics.
Check e-bay or do a google search for PC osciloscope... You can't miss it.
I'm looking for assembly instructions, picture, or anything to help me assemble stimulator v1. My board says" EFI332 stimulator Board v1 jsc" Any help appreciated.
That's a very old stim designed for another EFI project that predates MegaSquirt (though EFI332 did involve Bowling and Grippo and others). So it is at least 15 years old, and was only produced well before documentation efforts began on MegaSquirt. As a result it has never been supported here.
If I were you I and I couldn't get your stim to work by examining it and experimenting, I would probably purchase a newer supported stim designed for MegaSquirt controllers.
Lance.
"Never wrestle with pigs. You both get dirty and the pig likes it.” - George Bernard Shaw