Now that MegaSquirt has been brought up I've gotta chime in. The controllers we use at our shop are all MegaSquirt. My AMX is getting one with a custom manifold, my 64 Tempest uses 2 of them, one to run the vortec 4.3 and the other to run the 4L60E. We offer stand alone setups installed and tuned and when we are doing something really odd we call the guy who wrote the coil pack code, he is one of our good friends. He splits his time between Michigan and Florida so we line the really off the wall stuff up with times he's here. Our turbo probe runs no stock computer or wiring and has been putting 350 horsepower to the ground with a MegaSquirt for a few years (previously we used an FMU and the M/S is making much more power and runs better). MegaSquirt can now use wide bands for those who want them, has an autotune feature, can run coil packs (I'm cutting my old amc disty in half to only run the oil pump), can control water injection or any 12 volt system in a variety of trigger schemes. EI: at 5 pounds boost start water injection, at this percentage of throttle position do this or that, etc. They are batch fire which some people don't prefer but we've had zero problems with them once they are set up properly. We do sell completed units (through PRD) and have bought stuff from Glensgarage previously and have never been disappointed with his stuff either. ~John -----Original Message----- From: amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx [mailto:amc-list-bounces@xxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Swygert, Francis G MSgt 436 CES/CECM Sent: Friday, December 08, 2006 9:10 AM To: aje1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx; mail@xxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: [AMC-List] Fuel Injecting the big Dogs Armand, everyone I've ever talked to about the Holley EFI system has said "spend the money for the closed loop option!" (back when it was an add-on, which was after the first kit came out). The first Holley system was really made for the drag strip, not street use. You had a control box and had to set everything! The only racer I ever talked to that used it successfully and really liked it kept a chart with key measurements (temp, humidity, altitude, 60' time, 1/4 mile time) for each track, and what settings were used. He would then take those readings before a run and make the proper settings. Car was pretty consistent after a couple years running. Every time he made a change (cam, jets, whatever) he had to make an estimate of the settings then start over keeping records. He got good with it -- after a half dozen runs it would be pretty much dialed in. To get the best results on a street vehicle you had to make minor adjustments all day. A carb was better! He never tried it on the street, realizing the amount of adjusting that would be needed to make it superior to a good carb. The closed loop kit made it streetable, but it was still hard to adjust until a computerized tuning system was introduced. The old ones had four or five dials that were adjusted manually, no computer interface that I recall. The Edelbrock system is great, but there's something they don't tell you in most of the literature -- you need a PROM programmed for the base-line. The Edel EFI is made by an OEM supplier for Edelbrock. When you buy it you get a card to fill out with your engine parameters. The company then burns a PROM and sends it to you. THEN you can program the computer -- or rather fine tune your engine. The computer still only has so much +/- adjustment from the base-line parameters. To me this isn't a truly programmable system. If you swap cams you will most likely have to have another PROM burned, unless the difference in the previous cam is relatively minor. If you like to tinker with the engine and try different things you'll quickly run out of adjustment range. If you have your engine about where you want it and don't plan on making a lot of changes, this is great! Otherwise you need a truly user programmable system. As far as user programmable and affordable systems go, there are two that I know of. Both require a little work on the user's part. They are just computer and wiring systems, you have to adapt/furnish intake, wiring connectors, and sensors. The first is the MegaSquirt (http://www.bgsoflex.com/megasquirt.html). Depending on your level of electronics skill, you can build the thing from scratch, a bare circuit board and parts kit, or buy complete from several different vendors who will guarantee them. Glen Hoag is a dealer for ready to go controllers (a list member -- www.glensgarage.com -- for an article on one of his units see http://www.olenik.com/tvr/tvr.pl?page=fuelsystem). These have been used on everything from lawn mower engines to turbo V-8s, and I think on a couple Jag V-12s. The most complete unit that has been around longer is from Simple Digital Systems (www.sdsefi.com). This comes with a hand held programmer. It's made in Canada and has been around since 1993. Costs more than the MegaSquirt, but it's more sophisticated too. It's even been used on aircraft (but isn't certified -- home builts and owner conversions)! I've watched this one develop for a while now, and if I were going to use a ready made aftermarket system this would be it. I don't think anything else is as flexible at the price. There are similar systems out there, but all are more expensive and/or limited. The new Racetek system has the advantage of being all but bolt-on and drive. You still have to connect a computer to put in the base-line info. But this is about as easy as it gets -- bolt-on, plug into your desk-top computer, answer a questionnaire type program, install ECU, then drive!! Not a lot of tinkering -- the system adjusts itself as you drive. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com