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Suzuki Vitara 1999 J20A Australian version

D. Harvie 2011

Test Condition Explanation

All tests conducted with ambient air temp between 15-20 degrees Celsius, and a corresponding
IAT within 2 degrees of this (measured in the air box.)
A 1-bar MAP sensor (standard GM unit) was used to record engine load. 0% load indicating total
vacuum (~0V sensor output) and 100% load indicating atmospheric pressure (wide open
throttle).
The objective was to build a base set of data that can be used as a starting point for an
aftermarket ECU (probably a Megasquirt.) As I also wish to use a MAP sensor and dispense of
the MAF sensor, all measurements are judged against MAP vs RPM. This never was going to
give a perfect relationship since thats not what the computer uses. However quite consistent
results were observed regardless.
If you dont understand the typical EFI computer, you wont understand what Ive written
below. Megasquirt has some good reading material for starting out.

Idling:

Warm engine idle speeds of 800-820RPM,


Typical load 20%,
Stable pulse widths between 2.6 2.7ms.

Start up:

Cranking pulse width not observed.


Startup enrichment of approximately +1ms, tapering off linearly over the first 5 seconds.
Fast idle of 1200rpm with a pulse width of around 3.2ms for the first minute or so of idling
(given a reasonably warm engine to start with).
Average fast idle load was 16-17%.

Wide Open Throttle

Test run at 1500-2000rpm to gauge 100% volumetric efficiency pulse width.


Pulse widths 11-12ms reasonably consistent across 1500-2000rpm range.
High speed runs to red line (6500rpm) showed a reasonably consistent pulse width gradually
increasing to just over 12ms. Interestingly no taper off of the pulse width was observed up to
redline. Though this data is only rough because acceleration enrichment could not be separated
from the base map, as I have not been able to hold the vehicle at high RPM under full load.
Regardless this is a good starting point and I dont think it will be too far off.

Mid-throttle

Not much interesting to talk about in this area. It basically follows a linear path between idle
load to wide open throttle for pulse width. However for completeness here are some
generalized ranges of results from the data sets:
o < 10% closed throttle fuel cut or 1.7-2ms
o 20% 2.5 to 2.7ms
o 30% 3.5 to 3.7ms
o 40% 4.5 to 4.8ms
o 50% 5.5 to 5.6ms
o 60% 6.5 to 6.6ms
o 70% 7.3 to 7.8ms
o 80% 8 to 9ms (this is based on much more limited data set).
o 90% 9.8 to 10.8ms
o WOT 11.5 to 12.5ms

Conclusions

Given the 2.5ms idle condition, this follows standard practice of sizing injectors to ensure a
pulse width >2ms at idle to ensure stability (i.e. injectors able to fully open and close.)
At 12.2ms @ 6500rpm, this represents a duty cycle of 66% (sequential injection, one pulse per
two revs.) Even with keeping duty cycles below 90%, if RPM is not increased beyond the current
red line, this should be able to support an increase of 30-40% in MAP without extra fuel
pressure or extra injectors (maybe 6ish PSI boost).
From the fairly large amount of data collected, I would conclude this should be quite an easy
engine to get up and running on an aftermarket computer.

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