Originally posted by Shonky
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Without turning this into a DSO discussion...
Just be aware they are fairly basic devices but I think they have a place in between multimeters (these Owon units also have an OK one built in that's separate to the scope section) and a proper scope. They are limited to fairly basic triggering and have limited sample/memory depth. The automatic measurements are just the basic ones. They can't do any protocol decoding eg. CANbus.
A 40MHz unit should be plenty for pretty much anything car related. The higher bandwidth is relevant if you may want to use for any more serious electronics. Many microcontrollers are 100MHz+ these days.
Look up Kerry Wong on Youtube for some good reviews of them.
I have a 100MHz Owon and it does the job although I've not really used it in a car environment yet.
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sapote Shonky Yea, the Owon scope is what I was going to go for. I’m a complete noob when it comes to oscilloscopes though, I know how they work in principle but never actually used one. From the small bit of reading I’d done in the past I read that it’s worth the investment on one with a higher sample rate as it’ll be more useful in the future.
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Owon HDS242(S) (and also 272, 2102, 2202) are quite capable self contained scopes starting around USD120. Might be a bit easier than a laptop + USB scope.
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"Just not 100% sure how I get readings from those while driving the car…"
No need to drive as the fuel status 8 will show up with rpm higher than 2000.
This seems to be an nice digital storage scope for less than $70. max input voltage is 35v perfect for car electronic. The o2 sensor signal is a slow signal, way below 20Mhz of this scope bandwidth. Which scope that you're looking with 40Mhz?
I use a Pico scope 3000 series and like it, but it's more expensive.
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Originally posted by sapote View PostOn the post cat sensors: as soon as the rpm was over 2000rpm, the cats seem not able to treat the exhaust gas and the sensor signals dropped below 0.5V -- a sign of aging cats?
Originally posted by sapote View PostOn the fuel status 8 bad open fault, it is hard to trouble shoot as the open loop is just a short moment and so no error codes. I would expect that during status 8 -- open loop should cause rich mixture but then why the pre cat o2 switched to lean, below 0.5v?
Originally posted by sapote View PostOn the same log, looking at the pre cat sensor switching pattern, notice the during the high rpm that the sensor seems to switch less often than during idling instead of faster proportional with rpm. I think this is caused by the slow sampling of the reader, as if the oscilloscope was used then the switching frequency should be faster during higher rpm. This means we cannot tell what mixture that the sensor sensed during the higher rpm with fuel status 8 -- rich or lean.
You might want to look at the sensor signal with a oscilloscope.
I could pull all PIDs apart from pre-cat, fuel status, and rpm? Would result in a higher resolution log in theory.
I don’t currently own an oscilloscope, though I’m happy to buy one of the cheaper 40MHz ones from Amazon and back probs the O2 sensor plugs. Just not 100% sure how I get readings from those while driving the car…
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On the same log, looking at the pre cat sensor switching pattern, notice the during the high rpm that the sensor seems to switch less often than during idling instead of faster proportional with rpm. I think this is caused by the slow sampling of the reader, as if the oscilloscope was used then the switching frequency should be faster during higher rpm. This means we cannot tell what mixture that the sensor sensed during the higher rpm with fuel status 8 -- rich or lean.
You might want to look at the sensor signal with a oscilloscope.
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On the post cat sensors: as soon as the rpm was over 2000rpm, the cats seem not able to treat the exhaust gas and the sensor signals dropped below 0.5V -- a sign of aging cats?
On the fuel status 8 bad open fault, it is hard to trouble shoot as the open loop is just a short moment and so no error codes. I would expect that during status 8 -- open loop should cause rich mixture but then why the pre cat o2 switched to lean, below 0.5v?
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Originally posted by sapote View Post
Please don't turn on the AC for the test. Do hot idle again to confirm MAF is around 4g/s at idle and not 6.
The only thing I can see is the status 8 peaks are around the times where the pre-cat o2 sensors are below 0.1v, or 0vLast edited by jamesfoley; 05-14-2023, 03:53 AM.
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Originally posted by jamesfoley View Post
So I could get another DME, have the EWS removed and it will just work?
Does the milage / VIN / FA coding not matter? Not doubting you, just trying to understand what data is stored in what modulesHi all, I purchased a spare MSS54HP ECU for my CSL airbox that I'll be installing soon. I wanted to test out the spare MSS54HP ECU so I installed it in my car and flashed my existing partial BIN with EWS deleted via ECUWorx. I used BMW Flash for pulling my original partial BIN and flashing the new ECU. I tried to start the car
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Originally posted by Slideways View Post
After disabling the EWS, it should just be plug and play with another DME.
Does the milage / VIN / FA coding not matter? Not doubting you, just trying to understand what data is stored in what modules
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Originally posted by jamesfoley View Post
Could do, what's involved in doing that? I'm assuming there are EWS and mileage things to sort?
Flashing my DME to a newer firmware version was a route I was going to go down also, unless its safer to leave my DME as it is and get an updated one to try just in case something breaks...
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Originally posted by sapote View Post
The fuel status 8 events is a very short time, and so I don't think it forced into the open loop control. I want to know what sort of problem leading to status 8.
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Originally posted by jamesfoley View PostMight sound like a dumb question, I know leaking injectors can richen the mixture which would cause negative LTFTs, but why would they cause the fuel system to go into open loop fault? I would have thought things would have to be bad enough to throw a code..
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Originally posted by Slideways View PostWhat about trying another DME?
Flashing my DME to a newer firmware version was a route I was going to go down also, unless its safer to leave my DME as it is and get an updated one to try just in case something breaks...
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