,,,,my truck is at a -2degree and injecting 702.6 at 10mm3,, at 30frp-c,, can anyone explain what that is so to speak when it comes to tuning,,, sorry guys I’m not the best at asking the exact right thing,, and could someone explain how the timing calc works or how to use it,,
For example If u use 2d. Would u want to increase to 1404 at 10mm3 I order to inject 702 before Tdc and 702 atdc..
Sounds like you're watching your truck at idle. Here are a few things I have learned with my LMM.
1. Don't change 'torque based fuel, low alt' all the way down to torque based fuel, high alt, regen1'. It can really screw with shifts defuels etc, especially in the 40-80mm3 area. IF YOU DO, just change the bottom two or three rows to get your desired mm3 at WOT. For example if you want to get to 125mm3, plug that in the bottom three rows etc, just make sure you adjust pedal position torque so you get the torque number that gets you your newly desired mm3.
2. Dont play with pilot. I do not believe we have all the necessary tables to make adjustments to quantity/pulse in the cruise/mid range. You can shut off pilot at higher rpms, but if you do it wrong you get a timing limiter that gets activated. Best way is to change pilot quantity, and set it to '0' at 2800+rpms, aat 80mm3 and higher.
3. main injection mixture limit is a great tool for smoke control. 1-1.100 works good, depending how hard your fueling is.
4. If you want to change idle timing, believe it or not but it is the 1000rpm row. Its mislabeled.
5. Fuel pressure gets interesting with the LMM. If you try to raise rail pressure, it will allow you to raise it about 5-10mpa max, and then you encounter a limiter. You can get around this by going to 'Fuel Pressure ECT, Low Altitude' or whichever table you may be using. If unsure which altitude you may be, just change them all the same...But, if you go into airflow it shows you what barometric pressures it uses for low/med/high altitudes.
Anyhow, in this table, it allows you to adjust fuel pressures based on coolant temps. I like more rail pressure, so I actually added 45mpa from 1000rpm up to 4000rpm. You then go to the fuel pressure multiplier tables right beneath, and set 1 to all the coolant temp areas. NOW, you go to your fuel pressure table, set it to what you desire fuel rail pressure, and at the end you simply subtract 45mpa from it, and bam, you now have raised rail pressure. Just keep in mind you may now have some more rattle during cool coolant temps with the added rail pressure. Stock the ecm actually pulls rail pressure during warmup, above 800rpms, to aid in warmup.
You can also raise idle rpm here while using this technique.
6. IN THE DSP5 TABLES THE RPM ROW IS MISLABELED FOR FUEL PRESSURE!
400rpm is really 1000rpm
500rpm=1200rpm
600rpm=1400rpm
700rpm=1600rpm
900rpm=1700rpm
1000rpm=1800rpm
1200rpm=1900rpm
1400rpm=2000rpm
This may not be exact, others may have their own thoughts what each rpm truly is on the dsp5 tables, but from my logs, this is pretty damn close.
7. Make sure you dont get too crazy with the torque reduction table for vane control. If you raise this table on the higher rpms, boost can get a bit out of control during shifts..
8. 80mm3 seems to be the downshift point. If you have the cruise set, and the truck downshifts while towing, chances are it did it at 80mm3. So, I like to add pulse at 80mm3, and smooth down to 40 or 50mm3. This helps give some more pulling power without it downshifting constantly. IF you do this, remember to raise fuel pressure in this area so you dont get into a situation where you use excessive pulse width.
9. When using the timing calc, on the bottom of the page there are different options in the bottom left for all model years duramaxes. Pick LMM. You may notice that the pulse table mm3 doesnt match up perfect. You have to copy paste one mm3 line at a time, and past to the duration table. Also, even though it looks like you can copy/paste your dsp5 fuel pressure table right into the timing calc, dont do this. Even though fuel pressure is mislabeled in the dsp5 tables, and I showed how to correct this, the timing calc works correctly. Meaning, 600rpms is really 600rpms, and not 1400rpms. So, again you have to copy/paste one rpm row at a time. Its time consuming a bit, but this is the right way to do it. I like to use 45-50% for a daily driver tune, and 40% for a tow tune. Also, dont go below 6* timing in the cruise range for a tow tune. Blend it down to the nearest 6* mark. If you PM your email I can alter your file to show you this, as it is hard to explain LOL. Some people just whatever % even in the cruising range, where you can get away with much more timing without complications.
These are just a few things I have learned, some the hard way, some thru abunch of reading (and also confirmed thru testing). I hope this helps you and others out. Some of these things have taken me a while to figure out.