Well, all I will say is this, Jesse. I'm on my 12th Nissan now, and my parents are also Nissan loyalists. At various points over the past 15 years, we've
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04-17-2009, 10:21 AM | #121 (permalink) |
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Well, all I will say is this, Jesse. I'm on my 12th Nissan now, and my parents are also Nissan loyalists. At various points over the past 15 years, we've owned the same cars at the same time. Whenever this has happened, I've noticed differences between our cars that quite frankly boggle my mind. For example, at one point they owned a Pathfinder and my wife had the exact same model. When I drove their Pathfinder the first thing out of my mouth was 'What's wrong with your Pathfinder??' I mean, the thing was positively anemic. I actually popped the hood open to verify that it had the same engine it was so bad. Then I checked to see if they had something obstructing the gas pedal! That thing was awful to drive! Well, guess what? My wife and I have lead foots; my parents drive like grannies. My parents are the type of people I refer to as 'pylon-imitators' when they're on the road.
Now, take from that what you will. I don't know if it's the ECU 'learning' one's driving habits or what, but clearly something is adjusting to the way each vehicle is regularly driven. Also, I find your response to NizmoZ somewhat confusing. You wrote: "the car just has not learned what the engine needs at those conditions. once you put the engine in those conditions it learns what it needs and eventually feels better than before." Umm...doesn't your second sentence contradict the first? You begin by stating that the car just hasn't learned what the engine needs, then you state that once you put the engine in those conditions it learns what it needs. I don't know, maybe I'm just not understanding what you wrote. In any case, the point I'm trying to make here is that -- no disrespect to your resume intended -- but as far as I'm concerned, real life experience trumps all the certifications and courses in the world. I don't care if you have a Ph.D. from MIT and another one from Harvard. If your courses say xyz should function one way but real life empirical experience shows that it functions a different way, I'm going with the latter, not the former. In short, one should judge theory by empirical evidence/experience, not the other way around. That's common sense, right? Except I see people lose sight of this simple principle all the time. Far too often, I'll listen to some big shot academic with multiple degrees argue that someone's evidence must be wrong because it doesn't conform to his/her academic theory. That's bass ackwards, man. If the evidence doesn't support the theory, it's the theory that needs to be re-examined. I listen to these academic types attack the evidence without even considering that maybe, just maybe, their theories aren't 100% perfect, sometimes even suggesting that the evidence is fabricated.
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04-17-2009, 12:32 PM | #122 (permalink) | |
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Sorry man but my family has owned Nissans since the 70s. And all the Nissans since 95 have this type of ECU learning. The cars adapt to the driver. If you drive it easy, the car adjusts all the fuel/air trims to meet the best for those type of conditions for that driver. Once the driver or another one starts to drive the car and drives differently, the car will have to readjust itself again to make it optimal for that type of driving. So yes it does adapt to the driver. Let us know when you have actually tuned a ECU like Technosquare or UPREV then you might actually know how they work.
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04-17-2009, 12:37 PM | #123 (permalink) | |
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A good example is our 2001 Altima. My father drove that car for years. Everytime I got in it, felt like a dog, and weak and slow. Then my mom had to use it for a week. She also noticed it it was slow at first. But she has a lead foot. It woke up after about 2 days of driving and really felt peppy. I then drove it after she did and agreed with her that it was really peppy. Nothing like it was before. The 2003 Altima was a 4 banger. It felt like a V6 because of the way she drove it and when the dealer had it they couldn't believe how peppy and strong it was for a 4 banger out of the rest of the ones they have driven. Again I am going to say this. The ECU learns from the person driving and makes changes. Jesse, this is the way Nissan's work. I can't say for other manufactures but they also might be similar. 1978 Datsun B210 1991 Sentra SE-R 1987 200SX XE 1992 Sentra SE-R 1997 Quest 1995 Maxima SE 1998 Maxima SE 2000 Maxima SE 2001 Sentra SE 2001 Altima 2003 Altima 2001 Maxima SE 2003 Pathfinder LE 2004 Titan 2004 G35 2005 G35 2007 350Z Current 2009 Murano Current
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04-17-2009, 03:13 PM | #124 (permalink) | |
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04-17-2009, 03:35 PM | #125 (permalink) | |
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I'm beginning to think we're arguing over semantics here. Take this statement, for example:
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Well what do you think the process of conforming is? It's just another word for adaptation, is it not? If I conform to my environment, isn't that the same thing as adapting to my environment? I mean, am I crazy? Or are we all actually saying the same thing but just using different words?
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04-17-2009, 04:12 PM | #127 (permalink) | |
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Exactly. Good job man.
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04-17-2009, 05:23 PM | #128 (permalink) |
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I just finished reading this thread from page 1 and Semtex seems to have hit it on the head, it seems like you guys are basically saying the same things but using slightly different words and debating on the differing paths the 'tech' takes to get there.
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04-17-2009, 09:37 PM | #129 (permalink) |
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When you are running in closed loop conditions (partial throttle, low engine speeds) where the car is getting feedback from the o2 sensor, the car will always be making adjustments for the given demands. I suppose in this scenario, it may seem like the car is learning since it is "adapting", but all it really is doing is trying to get close to 14.7 AFR to conform to the ideal stoichiometric fuel burning ratio.
Look closely at what Jesse is saying. It is subtly different. The car is not learning your driving habits. It is looking at whats going on in realtime and trying to figure out the answer to, "okay, now what do I need to do to get back to an optimum afr becase my O2 sensor is showing that I am currently injecting too much/little fuel." Under WOT/high load (open loop) however, the car is going to disregard the o2/AFR sensors and base tuning off a predetermined map. The car will look at 1)engine rpm and 2) MAF output to obtain a load value, and basically use these values in a fuel table to look up the factory preprogrammed fuel injection duration, and a timing table to look up preprogrammed ignition timing. These maps are static and do not change, unless you were to go in and physically modify the tables. Late 90's/early 2000 nissan OBDII ecu's had the tables stored in read only memory and could not be altered whatsoever. Aftermarket tuning solutions for these cars had to utilize daughterboards which house external roms that the end used could use to make their own map and "burn" to the rom. Once again, this data cannot be altered by the ECU itself. Now I can't say I know what is going on for the latest nissan ecu's, but I think the only real difference is the type of memory used which allows for the data to be flashed by some of these aftermarket tuners. Last edited by BalanBro; 04-17-2009 at 10:12 PM. |
04-17-2009, 10:26 PM | #131 (permalink) | |
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LOL
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04-17-2009, 10:29 PM | #132 (permalink) |
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I am done. I trust what the ECU tuners say not someone that just showed up in this topic.
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04-17-2009, 10:30 PM | #133 (permalink) | |
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Oh! and that's not theory. it's Fact. But love your comments....
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04-18-2009, 01:28 PM | #135 (permalink) | |
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