Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > TD6 Ecotuning gearbox |
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barracuda816 Member Since: 11 Jun 2012 Location: oxfordshire Posts: 213 |
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23rd Nov 2012 3:24pm |
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barracuda816 Member Since: 11 Jun 2012 Location: oxfordshire Posts: 213 |
Spanner
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25th Nov 2012 9:07am |
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mjdronfield Member Since: 04 Nov 2011 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 7774 |
That sounds excellent.
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25th Nov 2012 9:11am |
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spanner Member Since: 05 Jun 2011 Location: uk Posts: 134 |
Hi im unsure on that one as I only tested in normal gear position not sport but will report more over the next few days |
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25th Nov 2012 9:13am |
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ahebron Member Since: 01 Jan 2012 Location: The other Eastbourne Posts: 341 |
Hi Spanner thats great to hear.
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25th Nov 2012 9:16am |
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spanner Member Since: 05 Jun 2011 Location: uk Posts: 134 |
Hi
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25th Nov 2012 9:24am |
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madcima Member Since: 25 Oct 2011 Location: Italia Posts: 137 |
I ordered this unit, too, I'm curious how it works .... hopefully good
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27th Nov 2012 3:52pm |
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33CHINACARS Member Since: 14 Apr 2011 Location: Tyrendarra, Victoria, Australia Posts: 381 |
Will be very interested to see how this all works & its long term effects on the 5L40E
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29th Nov 2012 12:50am |
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RRPhil Member Since: 22 Aug 2011 Location: Blackburn, Lancashire Posts: 960 |
Luke, I would imagine that the screw is there to enable each solenoid valve off the production line to be individually adjusted to produce a consistent current vs. pressure characteristic within whatever tolerance band is set.
I can’t see that adjusting this screw would affect the maximum line pressure. Increasing current on the solenoid reduces the throttle signal pressure which reduces the hydraulic force on the boost valve, and therefore the preload on the spring acting on the pressure regulator valve. This reduces line pressure. Pull the wires off the solenoid and you’ll get maximum line pressure (which provides limp-home in the event of an electrical fault). As you can’t adjust the solenoid valve to do less than nothing, I can’t see how the maximum line pressure would be altered by adjusting the screw.
I can see that adjusting the calibration screw will alter the throttle signal pressure (and therefore line pressure) for a given current once away from maximum pressure, but I suspect that the transmission ECU’s adaptive learning will then eventually adjust the supplied solenoid current to get back the shift times that it’s programmed to maintain, effectively cancelling out the adjustment. Phil Admin note: this post has had its images recovered from a money grabbing photo hosting site and reinstated |
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1st Dec 2012 12:59am |
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Sea Aitch Member Since: 17 Feb 2011 Location: Hertford Posts: 120 |
Did the ECU swap yesterday, and so far I'm really impressed. Changes are smooth and precise, and it feels really good to have lost the variable revs without a significant change in speed when doing more than 35mph. The display on the dash seems to alternate between "D" and "S" without any direct input from me, but I haven't (as yet) worked out exactly why and when this happens.
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2nd Dec 2012 3:03pm |
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spanner Member Since: 05 Jun 2011 Location: uk Posts: 134 |
Hi the sport mode is when the tc is in lock up i gather you can ajust this with a dill switch in the ecu i think its 52k 55k 58k i found that i need it to be set at 55k because i noticed judder at slow speeds |
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2nd Dec 2012 3:25pm |
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barracuda816 Member Since: 11 Jun 2012 Location: oxfordshire Posts: 213 |
RRPhil,
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3rd Dec 2012 10:02pm |
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Sea Aitch Member Since: 17 Feb 2011 Location: Hertford Posts: 120 |
Luke
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3rd Dec 2012 10:42pm |
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madcima Member Since: 25 Oct 2011 Location: Italia Posts: 137 |
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7th Dec 2012 3:13pm |
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