SIZEMOREMK
Junior Member
Of course one turns off the Traction Control when ready to play, but lets say you forget to turn it off now and again at WOT under boost.
How bad is that?
I was talking to an LS guy, that is admittedly not a gearhead, but said that he was reading in a LS forum somewhere that it could cause detonation due to leaning out the motor. He couldn't remember the specifics, but also read that it cause very severe overheating in some of the GM cars (I would assume maybe because of the detonation)???
I found some other generic things, even one on the Kenne Bell site that said it can cause the motor lean out.
http://kennebell.net/KBWebsite/Common/pdfs/46gtTechTips.pdf
I've heard some assumptions about what the traction control does on the MMs, seems everything from pulling timing, cutting fuel, applying brakes. Does anyone know for sure what exactly occurs when the TC kicks in with our cars? I'm curious what it does, how long, and how many times it does it?
I haven't purposely tried to experiment with it, but when I first got the car I tripped it a few times from a stop, but never got the distinct feeling that brakes were applied. All I could really tell was that power seemed slightly reduced for some short period of time from a launch. I seem to remember at least once where I tripped it coming out of a curve kinda hard and couldn’t really tell it did anything other than flashing the TC light.
I'm curious how the TC "feels" to some of ya'll when it gets tripped?
I have experimented with a newer stock Taurus I rented in snow/ice conditions, and I can verify whatever its TC does is much more aggressive than a MM. I could floor it on an ice patch and not lose control of the car.
If the fuel was reduced during WOT/boost I could of course see the problem going lean. But if fuel is cut completely for some period of time under WOT/BOOST, is there a reason that is particularly bad?
Or might it be that fuel is cut for a very short period of time, causing a generic shock to the engine when fuel comes back on, or does the fuel cycle on and off quickly for some period of time? Or does it cut fuel to some cylinders and not others?
I ask because I pretty much blew a motor (MMR 600 with cast crank, forged rods/pistons) where the shops opinion was that it looked like the engine had been detonating for some time due to the condition of the bearings and such (quite shiny on the top and bottoms of the bearings). There were never any indications of detonation that I noticed, and the tune was quite conservative at my request as this is my daily driver.
Not assuming this is what happened but curious. I will admit that I have two widebands that I probably didn’t monitor or datalog nearly enough; also have the SCT iTSX device that I should have been using to more closely monitor the fuel pump duty cycle and such as well. I know it could have been a number of things like fuel pump going out, bad tank of gas, etc. Just trying to prepare to fight off detonation in the new engine that’s fixing to go in.
Just wondering if perhaps several incidents of tripping the TC when in boost might have contributed to the engine failure.
Any thoughts?
How bad is that?
I was talking to an LS guy, that is admittedly not a gearhead, but said that he was reading in a LS forum somewhere that it could cause detonation due to leaning out the motor. He couldn't remember the specifics, but also read that it cause very severe overheating in some of the GM cars (I would assume maybe because of the detonation)???
I found some other generic things, even one on the Kenne Bell site that said it can cause the motor lean out.
http://kennebell.net/KBWebsite/Common/pdfs/46gtTechTips.pdf
I've heard some assumptions about what the traction control does on the MMs, seems everything from pulling timing, cutting fuel, applying brakes. Does anyone know for sure what exactly occurs when the TC kicks in with our cars? I'm curious what it does, how long, and how many times it does it?
I haven't purposely tried to experiment with it, but when I first got the car I tripped it a few times from a stop, but never got the distinct feeling that brakes were applied. All I could really tell was that power seemed slightly reduced for some short period of time from a launch. I seem to remember at least once where I tripped it coming out of a curve kinda hard and couldn’t really tell it did anything other than flashing the TC light.
I'm curious how the TC "feels" to some of ya'll when it gets tripped?
I have experimented with a newer stock Taurus I rented in snow/ice conditions, and I can verify whatever its TC does is much more aggressive than a MM. I could floor it on an ice patch and not lose control of the car.
If the fuel was reduced during WOT/boost I could of course see the problem going lean. But if fuel is cut completely for some period of time under WOT/BOOST, is there a reason that is particularly bad?
Or might it be that fuel is cut for a very short period of time, causing a generic shock to the engine when fuel comes back on, or does the fuel cycle on and off quickly for some period of time? Or does it cut fuel to some cylinders and not others?
I ask because I pretty much blew a motor (MMR 600 with cast crank, forged rods/pistons) where the shops opinion was that it looked like the engine had been detonating for some time due to the condition of the bearings and such (quite shiny on the top and bottoms of the bearings). There were never any indications of detonation that I noticed, and the tune was quite conservative at my request as this is my daily driver.
Not assuming this is what happened but curious. I will admit that I have two widebands that I probably didn’t monitor or datalog nearly enough; also have the SCT iTSX device that I should have been using to more closely monitor the fuel pump duty cycle and such as well. I know it could have been a number of things like fuel pump going out, bad tank of gas, etc. Just trying to prepare to fight off detonation in the new engine that’s fixing to go in.
Just wondering if perhaps several incidents of tripping the TC when in boost might have contributed to the engine failure.
Any thoughts?