richardc said:............. would recommend it fitted a tuning box which lifted the bhp from 105 to 138bhp which is worth doing it made a big difference to the cars performance hope this helps your search for a tow car.
ProfJohnL said:richardc said:............. would recommend it fitted a tuning box which lifted the bhp from 105 to 138bhp which is worth doing it made a big difference to the cars performance hope this helps your search for a tow car.
I hope you have informed your insurers as tuning is classed as a modification that enhances performance and as such must be made known to your insurers. Failure to do so may invalidate your insurance and can result in having difficulties in getting insurance of any kind in the future.
seth1 said:Perhaps,but some tuning boxs can actually lower emmisions.
see steinbauer.co.uk
No - unless you submit the car for full Type Approval! Some big fleets have had diesel vans remapped and been given that answer by HMRC.WoodlandsCamper said:Does retuning/remapping an engine also affect the output emissions and therefore the taxation band? Could one be charged with revenue evasion?
depends if you know what to look for. emissions and by that i mean CO2 which is what in theory is measured for car road tax, has a direct link to mpg.the more miles per gallon you get the less CO2 you are pushing out and indeed other pollutants. so if a remap's so called claim to improve mpg is to be believed [some should be so should not] then your emissions will be lower,all things being equal...but then barely anybody really gets the so called manufacturers claimed average CO2 figurers/mpg figurers .find it strange the fuss about it. "emissions from remaps or tunning box" when. as caravanners when towing our emissions are usually double/worse than those so called manufacturers figurers anyway.ProfJohnL said:seth1 said:Perhaps,but some tuning boxs can actually lower emmisions.
see steinbauer.co.uk
On a quick trawl of the web pages I can only see references to increased power and torque, no obvious general references to reduced emissions.
i know nothing about the company but if i went by their claim of only 20% more power, that would get my attention in a world full of silly claims of xxx more power.but then i look at that box of tricks and i can see plainly they are plunging into more than just one sensorthe fuel rail pressure or indeed the more modern addition of 2 sensors turbo boost ..they seem to be connecting into 4 sensors...not cheap but then quality never is...RogerL said:I've just looked at Steinbauer's website - no reference to reducing emissions or fuel consumption, just power/torque increases.
But at £799 plus VAT - they're having a laugh surely?
seth1 said:As i said in the previous post,when understood its simple.I can only speak for Steinbauer,the system they use does not connect to any external sensors.Instead it connects directly to the injector solinoids and thus the redundant injector harness then connects to the module.It benifits by not raising the fuel pressure.Because of this set up it has direct control over the injectors by means of pwm control(pulse width modulation).This means as well as making the opening duration last longer,it can shorten it to.So whilst coasting on neutral throttle the fueling can and is backed off.A reduction in emmisions is gained.
That assumes an increase in efficiency as engine rpm drops - while that's true at higher rpm, there is a maximum efficiency point and reducing rpm below that point makes effiency worse, not better.seth1 said:a power gain which would then lead to less gear changing and lower engine speed equals less emissions.