Useful resources for getting started

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Revision as of 17:26, 27 May 2024 by Jtownson (talk | contribs)

Background information

Modern engines for dummies

N54 and N55 Tuning

There are a lot of similarities but N54 tuning is simpler.

PID control

Dialling in boost control requires a familiarity with PID error control. If you are new to this, these introductions are highly recommended and enough to get you started.

Other B58 tuning resources

Tools for tuning

A2L file for your car

Having an A2L file that corresponds to your car is the resource for tuning because it describes every value, curve and map in the (stock) ECU. The A2L also describes all the units of these quantities and BMW's A2L are fairly well commented which helps with understanding.

As well as maps, the A2L describes every function and measurement in the ECU and the relationships they have to the maps. This provides a black-box view of what the ECU is doing and, although this does not describe the calculations taking place inside each function, for tuning purposes it is often enough to see the inputs and outputs.

It is worth remembering that, inside each function, the ECU only performs map lookups, simple arithmetic and logic operations. It is a real-time system, so even square roots are done by lookups. The results of complex modelling calculations (like airflow through a turbo) are always calculated offline and loaded into maps.

Usually, if we see a map is used by some function and, for example, it only has values defined upto a MAF of 1200kg/h and our new turbo flows 1800kg/h we know some sensible rescaling will be required and can move on without more detail.

This graph was generated using tools at https://github.com/jtownson/xdfbinext and shows the ECU considering pressure across the cat (for a gen 1 car).

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Getting tunes off of your car

If you have a dialled-in tune on your car, it is useful to read it off the ECU and get a feel for the settings.

We should add, this area of tuning divides opinions. There are some who criticise this approach. Meanwhile others consider that building on previous work is the best way to make progress. One explanation for the tetchiness in this area is that there are a lot of commercial interests tied up in engine calibration but, being software, it is hard to protect these interests. This leads to nervousness that reading tunes off the car will open the way to wider piracy. Nonetheless, tuners who own their own car also own the calibration on it. At the same time, they might bear in mind that the flashing platforms and customer tuners have done a lot to move the B58 engine forward, so to undermine that is to undermine the B58 community more widely. Our view therefore is that tuners should be able to use existing calibrations as a basis for their own work but should not share them or sell them without the express permission and involvement of the originator.

If you want to proceed down this route, ECU bench tool will read Gen 1 B58 ECUs (Bosch MG1 with the SPC5777M chipset). There are other more expensive professional options available, like autotuner and bitbox.

Creating tunes