OK, thanks. It's for an 80's sixpot running the earliest Bosch motronic, so not far off from you anyways.
I have an MS1 V2.2 board that I've had for years now that I'd like to finally put to use on my recently low pressure turbocharged '86 325e e30 bmw.
End goal is a squirt n spark setup using the LSx COP's I already have, but in the mean time I need to get it up and running on fuel only as soon as possible.
First off, it seems the easiest way to get up and running would be to setup the MS in a "piggyback" mode and leave spark up to the stock ECU, pulling engine timing from the single coil. The question is due to the nature of how the stock ECU controls ignition. The six cylinder e30's have a rotor/distributor attached to the end of the cam, with a "swipe" type of contact on the rotor. The ecu grounds the stock coil for spark signal, advancing/retarding as necessary, which the swipe nature of the rotor contact allows for.
Does that mean that I will not be able to use that signal for engine timing to control fuel? I understand that with batch fire, the timing isn't quite THAT critical, but I don't know if the variance due to the ignition advance/retard is something that can be tuned around.
If it's a problem, the later versions of these motors use a crank trigger wheel/sensor setup behind the crank pulley that is easy to retrofit, and I'd eventually be going that route. Not having to source the parts yet would allow me to get the fuel-only setup up and running sooner to be safer than the rising-rate fuel pressure regulator that I currently have installed.
Another option that occurred to me: just pull the rpm signal from the stock ecu tach output? I think I read somewhere you just need to set the input type to hall/optical? I could just keep the stock ECU long term and let it play nice with things like the stock gauges in this case.
Two more questions, and I'll try to be brief since this is a bit of a novel:
IDLE: The early e30 eta's have a separate idle control module from the stock ecu that controls an ICV similar to the one pictured above. Any reason I can't just keep this and not use any sort of idle control through the MS?
TPS: The stock TPS is the kind like RoughandReady described above, where it's basically two switches that close when the throttle plate is either closed or at WOT. If I'm not going to use the MS idle control, will that work for speed density/hybrid or do I need the potentiometer type?
Thanks, sorry for the novel!!