GstRacer
20+ Year Contributor
- 409
- 3
- May 6, 2003
-
BooneDocks,
Connecticut
are any of you guys running a GM maff and when it rains does your car act funny or any problems??? just let me know your expereinces
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.Jetblack said:Correct and I only had an issue with mine when I routed the filter in stock smic location and it rained.
The GM MAF does use intake air temperature as part of it's air mass measurement. In fact it works by temperature differential, measuring the current required to keep a wire hot against the convection of intake air. It will be somewhat affected by humidity as humid air contains less oxygen.ivanr4g63 said:The GM Mass doesn't have a IAT (intake air temperature) so the MAFT translator has that value fixed at 80* f, so that the ECU see the same value all the time.
I hate it too, and even though it may use intake air temperature in its calculations, it DOES NOT have a fluxuating intake air temperature output to the ecu, which effects the maps the ecu uses. The weather effects my car like crazy, and tuning is INSANE. Don't be surprised when I go to a full map sensor set up, or hack an aem intake air sensor into the wiring harness on my maft. I can't take it anymore.JayRolla said:My mechanic uses the MAFT and he hates it.
The amount of heat that is carried away from the wire will be directly related to pressure, temperature, and speed. All things are accounted for. This is why the Temp and Pressure outputs are clamped. They are not needed, but the ECU needs to see something so it doesn't flip out.
. This is a fairly common side effect for these units, though some poeple get away with it, like me. I had much bigger things to worry about when I ran the MAFt however, like the unusually choppy airflow signal giving me proportionaly choppy WBO2 traces, but that's another topic.