Do the Stage-I kits modify the stock fuel management?
Just like a normally aspirated engine (they're all just air pumps) if you increased air flow you will need to increase fuel flow to maintain the proper air fuel ratio. You will need to use a wide band air fuel ratio gauge to determine your air fuel ratio.
The controller for the supercharger is made by Dobeck for MPI.
MPI has many private label customers that use these controllers with different internal parts and programming specified by the company they are built for and it's application (Bender, Simons, Alpine/Powderlites, Pure Logic, etc)
It is essential to able to adjust the air fuel ratio on these machines to achieve optimum performance and rideability. This is especially true when adding a Turbo or Supercharger. The TFi Fuel module is completely adjustable allowing you to maximize horsepower from idle to wide-open-throttle. TFi is different from other systems on the market in its method of adjustability by dealing directly with the fuel injection signal
after it leaves the Factory ECU. This eliminates the need for expensive Factory Re-Mapping and it is completely adjustable and tunable. It adjusts your fuel requirements
without tricking sensors or modifying the factory settings, which can limit the ECU’s effectiveness at compensating for changing conditions. It plugs directly into your factory harness.
You may encounter the same throttle position at the same rpm in different riding situations. The engine’s fuel requirement will not be the same because the engine is not under the same load in these different riding situations. The TFi is load based for this reason. It reads throttle position, rpm, and it takes into account, boost pressure, and the load the engine is under.
MPI's fuel controller allows you to tune the fuel injection much the same way you would jet a carburetor and has the following adjustable functions.
Pilot (Adds fuel for Idle/Cruise)
Needle (Adds fuel for transition to main jet)
Main (Adds fuel Wide-Open-Throttle)
Boost Fuel Adder (Adds fuel for boost pressure)
Accelerator Pump (Adds fuel under abrupt acceleration)
Altitude Compensation (Adds fuel for altitude changes)
Right now all units are Gen3s or Gen3.5 but look for the Gen4 units in mid-2008 or 2009. The Gen4 units will have a 10-millisecond reaction time vs the current 100-millisecond reaction time. A faster microprocessor = more calculations in less time. It will also be able subtract fuel if needed, unlike the current versions, which can only add fuel.