Your tune file, the one that produced that log. Like it tells you in the 'sticky' thread at the top of this very forum.
Type: Posts; User: blindsquirrel
Your tune file, the one that produced that log. Like it tells you in the 'sticky' thread at the top of this very forum.
Short answer: RTFM. https://www.acdelcotds.com/subscriptions
Longer answer: Because the PCM needs to see the diagnostics run before it will use certain components and run the damn engine.
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Actually, to have the best driveability, toss the MAF altogether and run it full time in speed density. Mine did nothing but cost power and mileage.
Start over with a stock file. That one is still too far gone, same as the last time you posted with this same issue. It's turbo, with a 1-bar MAP? And no SD operating system? And the injectors are......
Nope, setting that real low is for 'MAF-only'. Needs to be set higher than it will ever get to.
Get a 1lb rubber mallet, go over ev-ry-thing under the vehicle. tap tap tap Tap Tap Tap TAP TAP... stuff will resonate, some things will resonate up to a certain point then a tinkly rattle or buzz...
Yeah, the world would fall apart if GM did something so stupid as having twenty-two possible door module part numbers for a single vehicle, each of which requires its own bespoke calibration...
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Uh, zeroed out what? Do not zero out the MAF table, that has nothing to do with failing the MAF and can create other problems. The tune file has the MAF failed correctly, with the exception of [ECM]...
Breaking my own rule here by offering help with a thread where the person didn't bother to include their tune/log files, and to not know that after 84 posts it shows you're a real slow learner, but...
I am not a wizard, but I am pretty sure there is more to it than just the addressing - there are all kinds of protocol things going on, prefixes that a module has to send before the others will...
A wizard, somebody who had the tools and know-how to do things like decode the datastream and dump the code out of and modify firmware in non-ECM/TCM modules, sure, one of those guys could probably,...
That's some kind of clanky mechanical noise the sensors are picking up, not something happening inside the cylinder.
One day to go before the post is edited to add the spam links...
You can start your own thread, it's free. Not likely to get a reply from other one-posters from seven and five years ago.
Wrong question... the E38 was used from 2006 all the way thru 2017 - different service numbers (the internal hardware), different applications/platforms, many many different throttle bodies that do...
It's a 6.0 LS, aren't they all the same? You guys must not know much about how these things work.
The 2013 ECM/TCM are expecting the other modules to be at different addresses than where they are in a 2019.
When did this start? Because there is a ton of stuff in the change log going back quite a long while.
I'd check for U codes in every module, if there are two modules the rest of the system can't talk to it's possible it's something like a devID conflict since there's such a spread between the year...
Opening the .xml will append all the graphs to the bottom of whatever you have there now, you may just not be seeing them. It won't replace the ones you already have there.
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That's a bunch of random stuff in there too, delete the ones not relevant. There's one for VE with no filters, then two others with different filter strings for different stuff.
I have...
It's still having to add around 20% almost everywhere, now it needs to be tuned. Be real careful with hammering on it until then, since that 20% being added by the trims goes away once it goes into...
There's also something funky in (some of?) the GMPP fan controls, they will run relay fans but not anything variable speed.
Main issue here is, the new ECM still has the 3.6L OS in it, trying to run LS V8 hardware.
A tuning device that happens to include rather limited scantool functions is the wrong tool for the job, if what you're looking for is a scantool.