Pete. (l33t FS) said:Rich doesn't kill cats, rich makes the cats "go to sleep", which is a good chunk of why the OEMs do power enrichment. The rest is keeping the exhaust valves happy.
This is how some modern turbocars run stoich even under high boost - they have better cooling in the exhaust area and good materials in the valves, and modern converters are a lot more tolerant of heat. I am sure that the temperature drop across the turbine helps too.
IMHO, "go to sleep" is a little much in terms of what catalyst do when rich- there is still a shocking amount of NOx and HC conversion going on, but CO conversion drops off a little. Little enough that it's an emissions problem most of the time when using enrichment to cool things down. But OEM's use rich mixtures to cool the exhaust down (for whatever reason- valves, manifold, catalyst, sensors, etc).
But Roc (I'm sorry, lazy to copy your entire name, lol), if you want good emissions, target stoich on the sensors, and once you have a really solid basic tune for air, then really focus on the transient fuel compensation. Keep it stoich all of the time, except for peak power for best emissions. And I do mean stoich on the sensor- try to stay away from 14.7 or a specific a/f- since that's dependent on what fuel you run- virtually all pump fuel these days is E10, which si 14.3. But the sensor don't care- stoich is stoich.
If you have problems idling at stoich, try adding spark first before bailing and running rich. That may not work, but worth a try.