stevieturbo wrote:Your crank sensor's wiring is reversed.
Fix that and then try
adrian wrote:The ECU doesn't care which way around the sensor is you just have to tell it whether the signal is rising or falling in the software. So if you have reversed the wiring, the signal will now be falling. Make sure the Ref sensor edge polarity is set to falling.
The output will work if the ECU is getting a readable ref signal, which if it is syncing up and the dash is reading an RPM value then it will be fine. The output from the ECU is a switch to ground so the tacho will need to pull the voltage up. You would have to check the documentation for the tacho but most likely it will require a pull up resistor to 12V. A value like 1k is probably about right.
MarkMc wrote:Hello DOOREV800,
The rising or falling setting of the ECU must match the signal you have going into the ECU. The correct procedure is to just wire the sensor to the ECU, if it is a Magnetic sensor (two wire) then you can wire it whichever way suits you. Next you would crank the engine with ignition and injectors disconnected and use the ref/sync capture to get a view of the signals. The ref/sync capture tells you how to set the rising/falling ECU parameter. If you have a rising ref/sync capture trace then you set it to rising, if it is falling in the ref/sync capture trace you set it to falling. There is no need to "try" different settings this is why we have the ref/sync capture application.
Noise Tr, Noise Ar are just warnings to tell you that the filters you have set are doing their job. These warnings WILL NOT cause any miss reading of the ref and sync and therefore cause no misfire. They are good to keep an eye on but nothing to really stress about. If your rising and falling parameters are set correctly based on your ref/sync capture then you should not change them ever.
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