Hey guys,
Question for those of you who are savvy on the inner workings of the MS3 ECU. I've had my Speed (mostly bolted, Stratified tuned) for almost 10 years and have been doing a lot of boring driving as of late - kid daycare dropoffs, grocery runs, etc. I have stretches of multiple days where I don't even hit boost. What I've noticed is that after a run of time out of boost, the first time I get into boost, the car does fine, but feels a little soft. Say I do a second shot of boost soon after, though, and everything feels noticeably stronger. The exhaust even seems louder and angrier and there's noticeably more shove. I don't have any logs to back this up yet, but I have a hunch that the ECU has a learn mode that monitors pedal position on a a given drive and has the ability to add fuel and timing as needed within a certain window. If it sees you hooning around, it can add timing, or pull timing if you're largely cruising out of boost. Am I off base with this?
Question for those of you who are savvy on the inner workings of the MS3 ECU. I've had my Speed (mostly bolted, Stratified tuned) for almost 10 years and have been doing a lot of boring driving as of late - kid daycare dropoffs, grocery runs, etc. I have stretches of multiple days where I don't even hit boost. What I've noticed is that after a run of time out of boost, the first time I get into boost, the car does fine, but feels a little soft. Say I do a second shot of boost soon after, though, and everything feels noticeably stronger. The exhaust even seems louder and angrier and there's noticeably more shove. I don't have any logs to back this up yet, but I have a hunch that the ECU has a learn mode that monitors pedal position on a a given drive and has the ability to add fuel and timing as needed within a certain window. If it sees you hooning around, it can add timing, or pull timing if you're largely cruising out of boost. Am I off base with this?