260DET wrote:Basically the problem occurs when slightly lifting off the throttle, the transmission then shunts badly, bang clang. The sort of situation which often occurs when driving in city traffic where the throttle has to be feathered to reduce speed slightly rather than fully lifted off. Problem does not appear to be clutch related.
Any suggestions? I would do some research myself but can't find any detail as to what potentially comes into play with a M600 when a partial throttle lift off occurs.
It would likely be fuel or ignition... Asif there is much left to choose from.
So not really m600 related per se.
If it is still providing positive output (power), then the transmission gears should stay loaded in the same 'direction'.
If you come off the throttle to the point where the power is going into the engine (rather than coming out of it), then the gears become loaded in the other direction.
So if it banging away, it sounds like the power is going around the 'net-zero' mark <in-out-in-out>.
Is it misfiring around there?
Do you have any Lambda measurements?
Let's assuming that your steady state tuning is spot-on.
Transient/dynamic tuning is probably a more involved and difficult thing to get right.
Maybe it going rich with wetted out runners and airflow going to zero??
Does it do this bang-clang just for a short time after the initial lift-off, or continually at that throttle position?
If for a short time, then how long?
And does it decrease in intensity in some fashion?
Perhaps the most important question is:
Is the throttle cable or DBW?