Car Craft Magazine Homepage Car Craft
 

Tune In, Turn On, and Make Power

With Innovate's Air-Fuel Ratio Meter, Tuning Just Got Easier
By Jeff Smith
Photography by Jeff Smith
116 0402 Tune 01 Z

116 0402 Tune 02 Z
This is the LM-1 kit supplied by Innovate Technology. The digital meter box is supplied with a fresh 9-volt and also comes with a cigarette lighter source that supplies the power for the heater portion of the sensor. The kit also comes with a 10-foot serial cable to connect the LM-1 to your laptop to download recorded data.

116 0402 Tune 03 Z
The key to this whole system is the Bosch LSU 4.2 wide-band oxygen sensor. This looks just like a normal oxygen sensor, but in fact is far more accurate in air-fuel ratios from 9:1 to 22:1. This sensor is designed only for unleaded fuel. Use of leaded fuel will permanently damage the sensor. Replacement sensors are only $50 from Innovate.

116 0402 Tune 04 Z
The lower right connection is for the cigarette lighter, the middle one connects the sensor to the box while the upper left connection is a serial port connector to either a laptop or your home computer. Since the LM-1 is portable, you can bring the LM-1 to your home computer and hook it up in a matter of minutes to plot the data.

116 0402 Tune 05 Z
We hooked the LM-1 up to Tim Moore's small-block carbureted Chevelle for some quick testing. Wide-open throttle runs produced air-fuel ratios between 12.3:1 and 12.8:1, so it was a little on the rich side. Here the A/F ratio is 13.7:1.

116 0402 Tune 06 Z
This is a data-log trace of Tim's Chevelle in varying conditions of part-throttle use.

116 0402 Tune 07 Z
These simple graphs illustrate why the narrow-band oxygen sensor (A) is only accurate around 14.7:1 air-fuel ratio. Note its near vertical line at that air-fuel ratio. Graph B illustrates the more linear wide-band sensor that offers more accuracy across a much wider range from around 9:1 to roughly 19:1.

116 0402 Tune 08 Z
The LM-1 could be especially useful when tuning your car on a chassis dyno.

116 0402 Tune 09 Z
It's critical to place the wide-band oxygen sensor in the middle of the exhaust pipe where it will not be affected by possible condensation in the bottom of the pipe. When placed near the collector, make sure the collector connection is tight so leaks do not affect sensor accuracy.


Discuss in Our Forums
Get Adobe Flash player
Get a FREE no-hassle price quote on any new car.

Related Articles

 
Enter the Car Craft Street Machine of the Year Competition
Here's your chance to put your ride to the test against some of the best cars in the nation. Don't... more
 
10 Dyno-Proven Horsepower Combos
The dynamometer has been called a polygraph machine, a tool for uncovering the truth, a gauge that... more
 
2004 Street Machine Nationals - Second Time's A Charm - Event
The Street Machine Nationals Returns To Lima, Ohio... more
 
Musclecar Electrical System Ideas - Get Wired!
Simple Electrical Ideas For Musclecars... more

 

Get Adobe Flash player