Lupo
New Member
I just switched to a Lightning 90mm MAF, from a Lightning 80mm.
It runs fine, but the idle is not as steady as it was with the 80mm. This is after driving around all day. Of course I used the proper MAF curve for the 90, versus the 80.
It doesn't hunt, or stall, but still jumps around a bit where it didn't before. Has anyone else had this problem?
Lets assume nothing is wrong with the MAF...
I'm thinking a coupe reasons might apply. First of all, this is a MAF for a much bigger engine, and at idle, my 3.2 does not draw enough air to read consistantly. In this case, maybe upping the idle a tad will fix the problem.(I'm at 1000RPM right now)
Or maybe because the piping path has a different transition? The 80 has a 3.5 inlet, that quickly goes to 3.0" where the sampler is, then the MAF goes to my 3" connecting pipe.
On the 90mm, it has a 3.5 inlet as well, but does not transition down. It exits as 3.5, and I had to use a reducer on the connecting pipe, which is 3".
Anybody have experience with 90mm?
It runs fine, but the idle is not as steady as it was with the 80mm. This is after driving around all day. Of course I used the proper MAF curve for the 90, versus the 80.
It doesn't hunt, or stall, but still jumps around a bit where it didn't before. Has anyone else had this problem?
Lets assume nothing is wrong with the MAF...
I'm thinking a coupe reasons might apply. First of all, this is a MAF for a much bigger engine, and at idle, my 3.2 does not draw enough air to read consistantly. In this case, maybe upping the idle a tad will fix the problem.(I'm at 1000RPM right now)
Or maybe because the piping path has a different transition? The 80 has a 3.5 inlet, that quickly goes to 3.0" where the sampler is, then the MAF goes to my 3" connecting pipe.
On the 90mm, it has a 3.5 inlet as well, but does not transition down. It exits as 3.5, and I had to use a reducer on the connecting pipe, which is 3".
Anybody have experience with 90mm?
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