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Date:         Tue, 26 Nov 2013 20:34:05 -0800
Reply-To:     Brett Ne <brettn777@GMAIL.COM>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Brett Ne <brettn777@GMAIL.COM>
Subject:      Re: Arduino and Vanagons
In-Reply-To:  <BLU177-W360ADD5FC57F1C8EA104C1E0EF0@phx.gbl>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

On Tue, Nov 26, 2013 at 7:23 PM, James <jk_eaton@hotmail.com> wrote:

> I think having this data is great - I could pretty much write the > progamming now, if I make a guess/assumption about the ISV's behavior at > speeds above idle. ( Which one could do, as the amount of air being > admitted is only a small fraction of the total air intake when the > waterboxer is working.) Thanks to those who took the time to make the > measurements. > > Yes, once you have the data in front of you, the coding becomes pretty straightforward. I agree, the behavior above idle probably won't matter much, but I still want to be consistent with the stock system.

> I wonder if the jump to 55% duty cycle is really to compensate for lower > available voltage while starting, or to aid starting itself? I guess I can > better rephrase my question as, does the ISV open more at higher voltages > (i.e., is there any connection between the amount of air it lets in and the > voltage applied to it?). If the ISV were a motor, of course there would > be, but I wonder if it is more like a pneumatic valve - and the pneumatic > valves I'm familiar with don't open more with higher voltages, as long as > the minimum voltage is met. (I teach pneumatics as well, using German > Festo equipment, and consult on pneumatic factory equipment.) Pneumatic > valves are rather 'digital' in operation - either they're on, or off, with > no intermediate positions. The vibraion the ISV produces reminds me of a > Festo pneumatic valve in 'flutter' operation. >

Good questions. I've been assuming that it operates like a small motor torquing against a spring, but it could very well be an on/off valve design. Has anyone taken one of these apart or seen a reference on how the innards operate? I think that the cold cranking duty cycle is set to compensate for the voltage drop and is just targeting the fast idle speed for cold engine running, but that's just a lot of thinking and assuming rather than knowing. Fortunately, we're heading right into the dead of Winter, so we'll have the perfect opportunity to test and adjust.

> > The PIC microcontrollers I teach all have 10 bit (or 1024 step) PWM, so > having a fine control over the ISV wouldn't be a problem, if we wanted > something with a finer control than the 256 step. For a cleaner design and > possibly more reliability I'd avoid a separate PWM controller, if I could. > > If there were several pwm signals being output or if the microcontroller were required to juggle multiple critical timing operations, then a separate dedicated pwm controller would be in order. We only have two time critical operations, pwm output and engine speed from the Hall sensor, which are pretty easily handled on a single microcontroller. You should give it a stab using a PIC.

Brett

-- Brett in Portland, OR "Albert" '82 VanaFox I4 Riviera


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