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How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop)
 
 
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How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop) [Paperback]

Jeff Hartman (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Motorbooks Workshop January 2004
Drawing on a wealth of knowledge and experience and a background of more than 1,000 magazine articles on the subject, engine control expert Jeff Hartman explains everything from the basics of engine management to the building of complicated project cars. Hartman has substantially updated the material from his 1993 MBI book Fuel Injection (0-879387-43-2) to address the incredible developments in automotive fuel injection technology from the past decade, including the multitude of import cars that are the subject of so much hot rodding today. Hartman's text is extremely detailed and logically arranged to help readers better understand this complex topic.

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How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop) + Engine Management: Advanced Tuning + Designing and Tuning High-Performance Fuel Injection Systems
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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Jeff Hartman is the author of How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems, Fuel Injection: Installation, Performance, Tuning, Modification, and the Turbocharging Performance Handbook, all from Motorbooks.  Hartman lives in Austin, Texas.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Motorbooks; 1st edition (January 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0760315825
  • ISBN-13: 978-0760315828
  • Product Dimensions: 10.6 x 8.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (37 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #49,108 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

37 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (37 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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59 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Holy Cow Why Didn't I Find This Book Sooner?, August 9, 2006
By 
Reviewer (Near Columbus, OH United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop) (Paperback)
I have a few books from the "Motorbooks Workshop" series and I am happy with all of them - in fact I'm kicking around the idea of building a library of them for myself, as they are all instant reference books full of valuable information. I could waste a weekend away just thumbing through them.

THIS BOOK is one of the best automotive "how-to" books I have ever read. Let me tell you why. I have been shying away from stand alone engine management in my search for power-adders on my cars. One of my cars is a mk2 Supra with a tired 5MGE engine and I've been wondering how long it will be before I have to do something about it. There aren't a lot of aftermarket companies out there who work with this engine. Do I rebuild the 5M with stock parts, new gaskets, and maybe a mild port and polish? This would save me the trouble of worrying about engine management, and it would be cheap(er). Or do I swap in the turbo 3.0 inline six 7MGTE from the later mk3? If I do this, I'll need to source a complete wiring harness, and what if the wires are cut, and then I can't figure out how to get it running? Or do I go crazy and swap a twin turbo 2JZGTE from a mk4? Same problem there. Or do I try something completely different and modify the 5M with independent throttle bodies, or build a grassroots centrifugal supercharger system for it? Or better yet, custom fab a subframe and shove an LS1 under the hood? I'm not worried about the fabrication, I'm worried about the wiring! Now it's not just a matter of finding a parts car with an intact wiring harness... I need to build an engine management system and that stuff is... well, scary. I don't know where to start, and I'm not ready to lay down the coin for some TEC III or Megasquirt Whatever thing if I don't know what I'm trying to buy. And the various forums I subscribe to can't offer me enough hands-on information to make an educated decision. I'm not going to pay $2000 for something just `cause everybody likes the cold air intakes made by the same company.

Behold! From behind a curtain Jeff Hartman steps forward with this book. Chapter 1, starting on page 14 outlines the basics of my system in a clear and concise manner. Step 1: Get fuel to the engine compartment. Step 2: Build an intake manifold and throttle. Step 3: Figure out a way to meter fuel. Step 4: Turning the injectors on and off. Step 5: Telling the computer what's going on in the engine. Step 6: Startup. Step 7: Naming the system and making it smart. Step 8: How did we do? Step 9: Revisionist designs.

Each step is explained in simple and effective detail. Yes, I had grasped these concepts conceptually before owning this book, but it is very nice to have them laid before me so neatly. There is good data in these first few pages. For instance, did you know that injectors should be designed around an 80% duty cycle? Also, most injectors cannot provide accurate flow below a threshold of 1.3 milliseconds open time. Jeff told me so. Perhaps this is in my copy of the Bosch Automotive Handbook, but Jeff's book has prettier pictures.

Jeff also told me that an air/fuel mixture of 12.2 is optimum, which I had heard before. But Jeff told me *why*. Nobody has done that before. After explaining most of these basics, Chapter 2 is a breakdown of the functions of an ECU. Jeff doesn't just devote a sentence to the ECU, more than a page of tiny text is devoted to description of components of a simple ECU. He then explains the advantage of calibrated engine management over mechanical fuel injection - his goal is to teach you how to be able to drive your car on the track *and* the street, without the necessity of keeping the revs up and dreading every stoplight.

Occasionally Hot Rod Magazine will have a column on "term of the month" or something like that. I like Hot Rod a lot. It's a good magazine that gets right down to the nuts and bolts of automotive enthusiasm. In these short technical columns, they will explain "volumetric efficiency" or some other complicated term. That stuff is all here, in much more detail. There are even *equations*. Who doesn't like equations?

Chapter 3 is dedicated to sensors. Eleven dense pages of information on sensors. Jeff explains the function of every sensor in detail, including MAF, O2, crank position, throttle position, temperature sensors (for air, gas, and oil), torque and pressure sensors... you get it. Jeff isn't short-changing us. It's all here. I was flipping through Chapter 3 and stopped at a familiar picture. "Hey," I thought. "That looks just like my MAF for my Volkswagen VR6." Yep, it's a Bosch design, and Jeff knows all about it.

Chapter 4: Actuator Systems. Jeff tells us all about the control of electronic fuel injectors - how they are built, equations for flow rates, and a huge chart of fuel injector specs from practically every Bosch, Nippon Denso, Lucas, or AC Delco injector on the market. Jeff doesn't care if you like American cars, German cars, Japanese cars, British cars, Italian cars, or whatever. He just likes cars. Me too. That's why I am in love with this book.

With most of the fundamentals out of the way, Chapter 5 jumps right into "Hot Rodding EFI Engines." The first page has a picture of a supercharged LT1, and the second page of the chapter has a picture of a Porsche 968 turbo. Buy copies of Corky Bell's forced induction books in addition to Jeff's book, and you'll know all you need to know. In this chapter, he talks about the stuff we all like to talk about. Supercharging, turbocharging, nitrous, big lopy cams, different intake manifolds, exhaust, fuel delivery components, all that. He even devotes a little time to hot rodding Chevy's TPI and Ford's MPI.

Chapter 6: Recalibrating Factory ECUs. This is the black magic I wanted to know about. Bam! Right away Jeff has a table of cars and available recalibration systems for those cars. It's not just the basic cars either. The list includes Honda, BMW, Buick, Ford, Chevy, VW, Nissan, Porsche, Toyota, Mazda, and Mitsubishi. Pick an engine, and Jeff knows about it. Audi 1.8T? Grand National turbo V6? Ford 5.0 or 4.6? It's in there. Then he shows how he removed a chip from a Mitsubishi 3000GT VR4 and learned to crack it. And look! A list of websites for hacking software. Jeff, you are the man. You have brightened my life.

I am writing too much. And I'm only a quarter into the book. He tells us more about piggy back computers, stand alone systems (AEM, DTA, Autronic, APEXi, Accel - an incredibly comprehensive list of stand alone manufacturers and their kit specifications -prices too!!), swapping factory engine management systems, converting engines to EFI, common installation and startup problems, building intake manifolds (with equations!), EMS tuning on the dyno and troubleshooting (and the best tools to do it), and emissions and OBD systems.

The last ~1/3 of the book is detailed descriptions of installations on a bunch of project cars (including a triple turbo Jaguar, a Lotus, a turbo Honda CRX, a twin-charged Toyota V6, a Golf 1.8T, and a '55 Chevy with a twin turbo small block). The project car sections are neat, but Jeff, I doubt that Golf 1.8T made 335 rear-wheel horsepower. But I'd believe you if you said "335 front-wheel horsepower." That's pretty much the only error I found.

If you are into cars, and you are building a car of your own with a semi-exotic forced induction or naturally aspirated engine, get ahold of this book. It's the best I've seen.
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Bible on Engine Management Systems, November 18, 2004
By 
AK (KY United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop) (Paperback)
The author has done a fantastic job explaining the engine management computers boxes in your car. As someone that enjoys engine tuning cars and working on forced induction systems, the book was a wealth of knowledge. There wasn't a single page that wasn't packed with great information. I can't say enough good things about the book, Jeff (author) shows his depth of knowledge and enthusiasm for the subject on every page. He explains the components one at a time and in depth and how they interrelate with each other as well issues he has had and how he resolved them. He also lists the issues he has had with his project cars and how he fixed them. I'm going to refer to this book and take notes from the project cars he detailed in the book to better understand the issues and performance techniques with my own projects. 5 STARS ...
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A very good book for learning the ropes, April 29, 2006
By 
Jack (Columbus, Ohio) - See all my reviews
This review is from: How to Tune and Modify Engine Management Systems (Motorbooks Workshop) (Paperback)
Let me start off by saying that this is an honest-to-goodness good book. Of the hundred or so that I own about engines this one ranks in my top ten no doubt. If you are considering buying this book and your reading the other reviews, especially the negative ones, know that a book cant teach you how to tune cars, only experience. But before you go trying to tune you need to know whats in this book. You need to know the systems and setups before you go trying to change things for the better or else you'll just make very expensive mistakes.
As far as actually using the tuning systems on the market today printing specifics would be pointless-there are too many and they change daily so you wont find much of that here. If you want to know how to use the management you bought, read the manual-thats why its there. Also, you need to know how the engine your trying to tune is setup. Pay close attention to things like injector size or how the ignition systems reads - and find out exactly how the engine is assembled and with what components. Theres a huge difference between sleeves and a block guard in a B-series honda,or between aftermarket and stock rods and you have to tune accordingly. Those are things you need to know before you ever crank the engine. Also, Save yourself the trouble and buy a real wideband oxygen sensor. A gauge reading your stock narrowband is no good.

If you really want to get into tuning cars, read up first. Read product manuals (many are available from the manufacturer on their webpage for free) and read this book. The next step is experience-tune your own car and blow it up a few times, or go to school-there are now traveling schools that teach you how to dyno tune the right way. Either way, learn as much as you can before you try or you'll be blowing things up left and right. Tuning is a tough business and if you want to play you need to know your stuff inside and out.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
For many performance enthusiasts older than about 35 (and motorcylists of any age!) the benchmark for automotive fuel delivery systems is still the carburetor. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Alamo Autosports, Bob Norwood, Hall Effect, Nippon Denso, Norwood Autocraft, Bell Engineering, Ignition Solutions, Split Second, Kim Barr, Perfect Power, Tadashi Nagata, Twin Power, United States, Bosch L-Jetronic, Dual Distr, Los Angeles, Proprietary Pin, Corvette Challenge, Fuel Main, General Motors, Position Triggers, Additional Supported Actuators, Alamo Focus, Calibration Library, Clean Air Act
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