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Thread: MAF Delete??????
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12-03-2010, 05:07 AM #1
MAF Delete??????
I want to clean up my engine bay and have seen many pics of cars with a MAF delete. What are the advantages? disadvantages? Could someone please help me with this decision.
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12-03-2010, 02:41 PM #2
MAF delete requires that the car be tuned to run without it.
The plus is greater control over fueling tables.
The minus is it allows less flexibility in how the car responds to changes.
Some swear by it, others find it too difficult to manage.
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12-03-2010, 02:49 PM #3
Yep, it's called Speed Density tuning.
I've been up in the air about it. I like the idea and all, especially since it gets rid of another electronic device prone to fail. But living at 5,000 feet and constantly changing altitudes everywhere I drive keeps me on the MAF side of the fence. Without it I think I'd be in there constantly fiddling. I'm still contemplating giving it a try on one car though.
I would think it would depend on your situation and how/where you drive the car.
Talk to Frost, he could give you real hands on and informed information about it.
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12-03-2010, 07:49 PM #4
i have a SD tune....cost a lot to tune and not all tuners do SD tunes
i would keep the MAF imho not worth the money unless you need a SD tune
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12-03-2010, 07:54 PM #5
i recall a post by frost mentioning solid sd tunes. part of it saying a solid sd tune can handle elevation changes with little to no problems.
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12-04-2010, 09:52 AM #6
Don't know, I'd have to get with Frost on it sometime.
If it's anything like I'm thinking, you basically take away the computers ability to tune on the fly at part throttle, you are telling it how to fuel the car and that's it.
Which basically sounds like a carburator of sorts for lack of a better example.
In which case it takes a ton of tuning and experimenting to get a carbed car to run decent around here. Going from 5,000 feet up to 7,000 feet and then back down to 1,200 feet (where the track is) requires completely different tunes. As a matter of fact I have a completely different carb calibration for my chevelle up here, that isn't even close to what it likes at sea level.
To the tune of changing about 5 jet sizes front and back, larger air bleeds, smaller idle feed restrictors etc...Nothing I have likes the thin air up here. I've got it to the point now where I can simply drop .010 size in the air bleeds on all four corners and the AFR is decent at sea level, it works, but it's not perfect. Good enough to drive on the street and takes 5 minutes to do, but not good enough for racing at the track. It sure beats tearing the bowls off the car for jet changes though (more time consuming).
In reality it would be easier to have a spare carb setup for sea level (which I do) and I just swap it at the track.
If speed density is anything like this, it would take an immense amount of time to dial in so it would run decent enough at various altitudes. But I don't think you could make it perfect. Driving down to the track would still require some quick tuning changes.
Or you could leave it at a sea level calibration and just live with it being pig rich up here at 5,000 feet.
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12-04-2010, 11:34 AM #7
Thanks for all the advice guys!! The car has to be tuned anyway as I just have a basic tune to get it running. Just did cam, heads, LT's, 4.10, intake all at 1 time, so it will go to get dyno-tuned within the next week. Just wanted some advice before it does get tuned so I can make a choice by then.
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12-04-2010, 11:38 AM #8
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12-04-2010, 11:52 AM #9
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12-04-2010, 03:15 PM #10
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Yeah an SD tune can work. Our 2010 challenger is SD from the factory so I consider that proof that it can be done. Nothing in the manual says I need to swing by the dealer before I take a trip to a different elevation
. Maybe its not the same and in that case, don't give me to hard a time.
As far as I know Chrysler uses SD on everything and ALL their cars have horrible gas mileage compared to their GM counterpart. I blame it on the SD setup.
So personally I'd leave it alone, its not going to make a huge difference in appearance IMHO.
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12-04-2010, 03:20 PM #11
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12-04-2010, 03:27 PM #12
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Well technically when you tune a car, I believe you start tuning in SD mode and then turn the MAF back on and calibrate that. So in theory, you're doing less tuning with just a SD tune.
SD tunes still use short term and long term fuel trims so the computer can adjust to changes just fine.
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12-04-2010, 03:34 PM #13
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12-04-2010, 03:45 PM #14
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I can't say that I have hands on experience here, just thinking out loud. I've read some tuning guides and it seems like when you tune a car, you turn the MAF and power enrichment off (along with some other things) and just tune it. Thats essentially SD tuning. I suspect it might be a little more finicky so dialing it in exactly might take more time...IDK.
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12-04-2010, 03:46 PM #15
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12-04-2010, 03:49 PM #16
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Well this sparked my interest in exactly WHY chrysler uses this which to me and others think it causes worse gas mileage.
I've not found something specifically talking about the gas mileage but I did find this article explaining a little about why they use it. It also says SD is used with or without the MAF in some scenarios which would support the tuning without MAF to a degree.
http://www.automotivedesign.eu.com/a...libration.aspx
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12-04-2010, 05:17 PM #17
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12-04-2010, 05:29 PM #18
ok NOW with people that have a built setup as in 408/big cam/AFR head/ FAST and whatnot, would it be the same take on the subject?Last edited by Blackbird WS6; 12-04-2010 at 05:32 PM.
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12-04-2010, 05:44 PM #19
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Thanks for the quote! That is good info.
So in 15-20 years my Challenger is going to have the same sucky gas mileage but it won't be any worse as long as everything else is in working order.
My LS6 will be worse as long as I never clean the MAF LOL. If I clean the MAF once a year I'm good to go!
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12-05-2010, 05:36 PM #20
I'm curious as to why or how it would affect gas mileage. Since the car should still be hunting for a 14.7 AFR via the 02's I would think gas mileage would remain the same so long as you stay out of PE.
That's my thoughts anyway. Maybe it would have been best to post this in the tuning section for more information.
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