Marc wrote:Foscora wrote:Thanks for "unfog" Marc !
Just a last question : Is there any reasons my will to experiment first on my NF2 wouldn't worth it ? Any things I could've forgot to think about ?
well, there is a bit of expense to standalone'ing an NF since it comes stock as a CIS engine, meaning you're going to need stuff like a fuel rail, pressure regulator, injectors, etc. starting with a car thats already EFI would save you that expense. Also as I'm sure you probably already know you wont be able to make a whole lot of extra power just from changing over to CIS on an NA NF engine. perhaps 5% at most. if your goal is to learn how to tune its not a bad place to start. pretty hard to 'hurt' one of those motors.
I put Megasquirt on my NG 80Q way back when, and it really woke the car up. I think having that metering plate restricting airflow into the engine really saps power. With a 272 cam, the car was super responsive and torquey, and would walk all over a factory 20v car.
The downside is you have to start from scratch with everything on the car. The factory wiring harness is useless. The stock ignition system triggers off the 5-window distributor, which I used with Megasquirt, but it has a lot of jitter in it due to the timing belt and distributor gear having play in them. Not super accurate, but probably OK for the power being made. I do not believe the stock flywheel has a TDC pin in it, but I never checked. On top of that, you have to machine the intake manifold for fuel injector seats (the bores where the CIS injectors go in can just be tapped if you can find an M22 tap), mount a fuel rail and injectors, and wire the whole thing. I used a 7A throttle body for a TPS, and put a 3" silicone elbow over that attached to a pipe with a cone filter on the end for my intake.
Edit: It sounded awesome with that intake and cam
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=srV2QWnaSoc[/youtube]
Sam