3 using the software, 4 accessing the fuel maps, 1 fuel setup – Haltech E6S User Manual

Page 37

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4.3 Using the Software


In order to make the software easy to use, the programme presents you with a menus bar at
the top of the display. The menu bar is accessed through simple combinations of key strokes.
Once the appropriate menu has been accessed a sub-menu appears giving choices on
available page heading. To increase efficiency there is also a number of hot-keys that allow
you movement between pages without accessing the menu bar.

4.4 Accessing the fuel maps

Pressing

¦m

¦m

¦m

¦m

will take you to the Maps Menu. From the Sub-menu choose the fuel maps

option. By using the cursor keys to move the highlight bar or pressing the underlined letter

of the option required in the case

F

F

F

F

. This will produce a further sub-menu that will allow

you to choose a range to be viewed.

4.4.1 Fuel Setup


The Fuel Setup works in an identical way to the Identification. It’s fields are different and
relate to the way the fuel is delivered to the engine. Enter the Fuel Setup by pressing

¦s

¦s

¦s

¦s

and then by pressing

F

F

F

F

key. The fields in the Fuel Setup are:


Ign / By: Ignition Divide By is the number of ignition pulses that will be counted until the

next injection pulse. For almost all multipoint systems, injection should occur once per
revolution and so Ignition Divide By should be set to half the number of cylinders. If
the system is operating in Batch Fire or Sequential mode, or is a rotary, then a value of
1 is suggested.


Decel Cut-Off: A common fuel saving feature in original equipment computers is a fuel cut-

off on deceleration. This will cut fuel delivery to the engine while coasting down hills
with closed throttle. This feature can be enabled or disabled on the E6S. It is better,
when first tuning, to disable this function.


Injection Mode: Depending on the jumper settings of Appendix C Injector Impedance the

E6S splits its four/eight injector driver outputs into two banks. INJ1 and INJ2
comprise the first bank. INJ3 and INJ4 form Bank 2 (refer to the wiring diagram at the
back of this manual.) In Basic Mode, Fuel can be injected in three different modes.

Multipoint injection fires all the injectors together. This is the most common setup and
will normally be used on engines with multipoint injection manifolds (one injector per
cylinder).

Batch-fire injection is usually used in throttle body or non-turbo rotary setups and fires
the two banks of injectors alternately. On eight and twelve injector fuel rails, with
high-flow injectors, this may also help reduce fuel pressure oscillations caused by all
injectors pulsing together.

Staged injection is usually used on high boost turbo engines. Injector Bank 1 fires all
the time, just as in a multipoint setup. Beyond a set boost pressure, the second bank of

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