arteeex
TY 4 Stroke Master
LJ -
I agree with most of your post. And, not to get all philosophical, there is obviously some risk of letting the smoke out of the box given we really don't know the limits of the ECU or the impact of stealing watts from the system. This is why I am suggesting we not push the system too hard. It’s only my opinion that 5 – 6A is a reasonable level for these aftermarket heaters.
In my tests I measured both RSI heaters and stock grips in parallel. The RSI heater circuit indicated 1.7 Ohms and the stock grips indicated 3.64 Ohms. At 12.3V from the battery I saw 6.6A and 3.27A for the RSI and stock, respectively. The difference here in both current (amps) and power (watts) is a 100% increase over stock.
Switching to calculated values and using 14V, the anticipated output of the stock grips would be about 3.9A and 55W for the pair at a 100% duty cycle. In the same conditions (and adding a resistor to bring the system to 2.7 Ohms (which I didn’t specify in my earlier example), the RSI heaters will draw 5.2A and deliver about 72W at a 100% duty cycle. This is how I arrived at the approximate 30% increase in output of the RSI over stock heater elements. ((72-55)/55)*100 = 31%.
There are many ways to parse this out, but the point for me is to keep the total heater circuit resistance, as seen by the ECU, to something in the range of 2.3 to 2.7 Ohms. I’ll accept the risk of a 30 – 40% increase in load– not so much a 100+% increase.
I agree with most of your post. And, not to get all philosophical, there is obviously some risk of letting the smoke out of the box given we really don't know the limits of the ECU or the impact of stealing watts from the system. This is why I am suggesting we not push the system too hard. It’s only my opinion that 5 – 6A is a reasonable level for these aftermarket heaters.
In my tests I measured both RSI heaters and stock grips in parallel. The RSI heater circuit indicated 1.7 Ohms and the stock grips indicated 3.64 Ohms. At 12.3V from the battery I saw 6.6A and 3.27A for the RSI and stock, respectively. The difference here in both current (amps) and power (watts) is a 100% increase over stock.
Switching to calculated values and using 14V, the anticipated output of the stock grips would be about 3.9A and 55W for the pair at a 100% duty cycle. In the same conditions (and adding a resistor to bring the system to 2.7 Ohms (which I didn’t specify in my earlier example), the RSI heaters will draw 5.2A and deliver about 72W at a 100% duty cycle. This is how I arrived at the approximate 30% increase in output of the RSI over stock heater elements. ((72-55)/55)*100 = 31%.
There are many ways to parse this out, but the point for me is to keep the total heater circuit resistance, as seen by the ECU, to something in the range of 2.3 to 2.7 Ohms. I’ll accept the risk of a 30 – 40% increase in load– not so much a 100+% increase.