rolyrolyroly
Guest
I've just re-read this and it's bigger than I intended, so for those with a short attention span, stop reading here!
I'm shopping around for a power increase upgrade on my car. I'm pretty much decided on the Custom-Code product which seems right for me, but am keeping an open mind for now as I'm not in a rush.
Developing fueling maps takes time and costs money. I know this as I've been part of a team doing this for gas turbine engines for about 20 years now. So £300 to £400 for what is apparently only a 15 minute job of reprogramming an ECU is not unreasonable, given the development that went into creating the software. What IS unreasonable, is the lack of technical data available regarding remaps.
I've asked one supplier if there were power curves available for me to look at, and if rolling road test was part of the remap process. He told me rolling road results are just for "pub talk" and a quick run up the road would show me how much quicker the car was.
What? Come on!
Either these re-maps are carefully crafted products, the result of many hours careful testing and tuning, in which case there's test results and associated technical data as part of the development process, and the re-prom costs of £300 to £400 are perfectly reasonable. Or they're the output from a bloke with a laptop bumping parameters until he gets something that works and will still pass an MOT smoke test. In which case a vague claim of 20-30% power increase would be what you'd expect and the re-prom costs of £300 to £400 are taking the piss.
Many suppliers don't seem to have a firm grasp of the reality that tuning an engine is very much a personal issue and people like choice. I'd like to be able to visit the supplier's website and pick from several existing power curves to choose from for my car. Yeah a choice, why not? One size does NOT fit all!
Then I'd like to be able to go to the supplier and be offered a rolling-road test prior to re-map. I'd then like to have the car re-mapped with the power curve of my choice (I'd expect a charge of about £200 to buy the "off the shelf" software remap, using an existing map.) and go home and use the car. If I'm completely happy with the re-map, then all well and good. But if having lived with the new map for a while and found some aspects of it I didn't like, I want to be able to discuss the issues with the supplier and go back and have a different map installed, and go home again and try the alternative map. And repeat this process until I'm completely happy with my re-map. And when I am happy, I'd probably have another rolling road test, to see what I'd got for my money.
I don't mind paying a charge every time my vehicle is programmed, a fitting fee if you like. Say £30-£40? Same with rolling road runs, say £50-£60 per run?
I'd expect a high price for a custom remap, say about £500. For that I'd expect to agree a power curve with the supplier beforehand and have the supplier create a map to meet that curve to within 5% across the range. I'd expect to have to pay a charge for subsequent changes to custom-remap after the initial "fitting", but obviously less than the initial large fee.
Is this unreasonable? I'm not asking for anything I won't pay for, but I really want to know what I'm getting and more importantly. I want to be happy with what I buy.
Does any supplier already provide this kind of service?
I'm shopping around for a power increase upgrade on my car. I'm pretty much decided on the Custom-Code product which seems right for me, but am keeping an open mind for now as I'm not in a rush.
Developing fueling maps takes time and costs money. I know this as I've been part of a team doing this for gas turbine engines for about 20 years now. So £300 to £400 for what is apparently only a 15 minute job of reprogramming an ECU is not unreasonable, given the development that went into creating the software. What IS unreasonable, is the lack of technical data available regarding remaps.
I've asked one supplier if there were power curves available for me to look at, and if rolling road test was part of the remap process. He told me rolling road results are just for "pub talk" and a quick run up the road would show me how much quicker the car was.
What? Come on!
Either these re-maps are carefully crafted products, the result of many hours careful testing and tuning, in which case there's test results and associated technical data as part of the development process, and the re-prom costs of £300 to £400 are perfectly reasonable. Or they're the output from a bloke with a laptop bumping parameters until he gets something that works and will still pass an MOT smoke test. In which case a vague claim of 20-30% power increase would be what you'd expect and the re-prom costs of £300 to £400 are taking the piss.
Many suppliers don't seem to have a firm grasp of the reality that tuning an engine is very much a personal issue and people like choice. I'd like to be able to visit the supplier's website and pick from several existing power curves to choose from for my car. Yeah a choice, why not? One size does NOT fit all!
Then I'd like to be able to go to the supplier and be offered a rolling-road test prior to re-map. I'd then like to have the car re-mapped with the power curve of my choice (I'd expect a charge of about £200 to buy the "off the shelf" software remap, using an existing map.) and go home and use the car. If I'm completely happy with the re-map, then all well and good. But if having lived with the new map for a while and found some aspects of it I didn't like, I want to be able to discuss the issues with the supplier and go back and have a different map installed, and go home again and try the alternative map. And repeat this process until I'm completely happy with my re-map. And when I am happy, I'd probably have another rolling road test, to see what I'd got for my money.
I don't mind paying a charge every time my vehicle is programmed, a fitting fee if you like. Say £30-£40? Same with rolling road runs, say £50-£60 per run?
I'd expect a high price for a custom remap, say about £500. For that I'd expect to agree a power curve with the supplier beforehand and have the supplier create a map to meet that curve to within 5% across the range. I'd expect to have to pay a charge for subsequent changes to custom-remap after the initial "fitting", but obviously less than the initial large fee.
Is this unreasonable? I'm not asking for anything I won't pay for, but I really want to know what I'm getting and more importantly. I want to be happy with what I buy.
Does any supplier already provide this kind of service?