xdsmlaser93x
15+ Year Contributor
- 53
- 4
- Feb 6, 2007
-
clifton park,
New York
Has anyone figured out how to set the emissions readiness monitors to always good using DSMlink yet?
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I'm prety sure (not positive) when you ignore a dtc wih any software for any car the readiness monitor gets ignored(shows n/a). That means the emisssion test won't look a it. That is how my friends mustang passed NY state inspection with no emission equipment. I'm pretty sure the same thing will happen if you ignore it with dsmlink. I will try to fid somebody local here in NC wih a 2g so I can confirm this with my scanner.
You can do it with the palm software. I don't think there is a way to do it with the normal software on a laptop.
As far as I know, this is the correct answer. We don't have readiness testing here but from what I've heard, according to the people that do, just turning the CEL off will not pass the car.
What about the sniffer test? NJ tests for NoX which is what the EGR is designed to lower. Is there a way to tune using DSMLink to lower NoX?
Richen it slightly just above idle to mid throttle, that should take care of it, do they have an AWD dyno there? PITA if they have it on the rollers.
Have you failed yet?
Richen it slightly just above idle to mid throttle, that should take care of it, do they have an AWD dyno there? PITA if they have it on the rollers.
Have you failed yet?
Good idea as well to lower combustion temps but won't work so well with DSMLink. If you add fuel, the factory O2 sensor will read this & compensate injector pulses to increase your air/fuel ratio back to the ideal ~14.7 to 1. The only way to prevent this is to add so much fuel that your fuel trims are no longer able to compensate. Though this wouldn't be a good idea as you would just be creating other issues.
I don't believe they dyno it. I never seen them do it. They just sniff it at idle.
What about the MAF? What if we adjusted it to read more air coming then it really is and thus the ECU will dump more fuel?