You can cut it off without grounding anything but of course the auto tune
function of the EM2 will not work without the O2 sensor input. The
mixture indicator on EM2 will drift around unless you ground it. This
is one example of where you can usually parallel two instruments from one sensor
and it will work. Mixture monitors just look at voltage from the
sensor and are usually very high input impedance so they should not load down
the sensor.
BTW Buly, when I looked at your EC2 map table prior to the snubber
update it was VERY erratic. I was surprised the engine ran well
enough to fly. Take a look at it with your EM2 and make sure it looks
reasonable after you do some tuning.
For instance, if two adjacent MAP addresses are at opposite ends of
the scale, it is not reasonable and you should investigate. It is
very instructive to fly with the MAP table screen up on the EM2 in track mode
and watch the table pointer (blinking bargraph bar) and the mixture
monitor. Move the throttle around so that the pointer moves through the
suspected problem areas and insure that the mixture monitor stays in the
middle. If it doesn't, adjust the MAP address that causes mixture to go out
of proper range.
Tracy
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:58
PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: EC2
question
I'm not using the O2 sensor lead for the EM2. I wander if I
can just cut it off at the plug, or have to ground it? I have installed a wide
band O2 sensor with it's own processor and display.
Buly
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