by Stephen Dean on Wed Sep 22, 2021 3:47 pm
With the M130, unless you have added Level 2 or Level 3 logging to the M1, you will have a fixed Diagnostic logging set available to you from the M1, this means that you are not able to make any changes to the logging in the M1.
If you have enabled the higher levels of logging in the M1, then I would concentrate the M1 logging on the engine variables, and the Dash logging on the vehicle channels, with some over laying of common channels such as Engine Speed and Throttle Position so that the data can be lined up during later analysis.
If you have the CAN Receive templated for the M1 correctly configured in the C125, then you will have a lot of data available from the M1 that can be logged in the dash.
When it comes to the choice of channels to be logged, and the rate that they are logged, there are a number of factors to be taken into account.
If the vehicle is only being used for short events (Drag Racing, Time Attack, sprint races) then you can afford to bump up the logging rates (within the sample rate of the sensors, there is no value in logging coolant temperature faster than 1hz for example, as the fluid will not change temperature that quickly) and number of channels logged, as you will be able to pit the vehicle and download the logging before the logging memory is filled.
If you are doing longer events (rally, endurance racing) then you may not have a chance to regularly download the data off of the logger, in this situation, you need to make a choice of having a higher logging rate/number of channels against the potential of the earlier data being overwritten and thus lost before you have a chance of retrieving it.
The other option, if you need more logging than is available on the Dash, is to enable the USB logging option on the Dash, this allows for the use of a higher capacity (upto 32Gb) external USB stick to log to (it logs the same data set that is configured for the internal logging), this will give potentially multiple days of high logging rates and/or channels.
Stephen Dean
MoTeC Research Centre Melbourne, Australia