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need help understanding about narrow and wideband a/f..
ok so im looking for a air/fuel gauge. a few people told me to get a wideband and some have told me a narrowband will due. so whats the diffrence? and what do you guys suggest? im a bit confused about this. so any help will be really great.
p.s. sorry if this in the place. |
If you want a air fuel gauge just to have one, a narrowband will do. If you want an air fuel gauge to actually monitor your mixture and tune it....you MUST get a wideband. I could explain the technical data of both but it comes down to what I just said.
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A narrowband can only measure A/F ratios between 14.0 and 15.0 (hence the name narrow band), but they do it with incredible precision. This is the stock sensor on your car and it's used for adjusting the A/F ratio at cruising and controlling emissions.
A wideband can measure from somewhere around 9.0 to 17.0 (wide band, get it?), but they don't have as great precision (it's still really freaking good though). You need the for tuning. EDIT: I'm apparently wrong, see teh_DIRT's post for the correct info. :) |
I'm not trying to come off as rude, but the information you just posted in completely wrong and unreliable.
A narrowband sensor can read in the same range as a wideband can, but it cannot do it with the same precision. A zarconia sensor (narrowband) is a voltage generator that produces between 0-1 volts. The issue is this. Below 14.7:1 AFR, the sensor will read a low voltage.....above 14.7:1 AFR, the sensor will read a high voltage. This voltage however is within such a small window (.5 volts) that it cannot be used to reliably know air fuel range. BRB dinner. Ok so that was narrowbands, which are weaksauce old technology. Most new cars come with widebands as the front o2 sensor because it does that much better of a job. Widebands are not voltage generators and work on a 0-5 volt scale. In actuality, widebands produce amperage which is then converted to a usable voltage signal via a wideband controller. This sensor can read the same range as a narrowband, but in a more precise manner. Widebands are handsdown the only sensor to buy, anything else is a waste of money. |
i want it to monitor my mix. cause at times its running lean and then its rich. so im looking to monitor it and besides its getting boosted sometime this month.
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or should i just a get the narrow band till i get the turbo?
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If you're gonna boost, wait till then and get a wideband.
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well does anyone have any recommendations for widebands?
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i have a zietronix wideband sensor, its a more expensive one but I love it and the software it comes with. GREAT logging abilities.
zeitronix.com or zietronix.com |
I have the FJO wideband with the NTK sensor ...the NTK sensor cost more than cheaper sensors like Bosch but it's much more durable/longer lasting if you run leaded gas once in a while, or often.
After I got mine NGK came out with a very highly rated wideband and it's quite a bit lower price than the FJO, so if I did it now I'd take a serious close look at the NGK setup. There are also other good ones around. |
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As for the threadmaker.....if you plan a turbo in the future just do yourself a favor and invest in a WB now. Personally i run a Zeitronix ZT2, it has nice, independent logging capabilities unlike most of the major WB's out there. |
yup zeitronix rocks. It can log:
wideband o2 reading wideband o2 voltage throttle position RPMS Boost EGT and user data (data of your choice) all in one interface. LOVE IT! |
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Also, the zeitronix software is amazing and they have a little LCD to display it all (I don't want huge gauges). I'm waiting for people to finish software tools to tune my ECU and then I'll probably get one of those. |
As its been mention in this thread a few times wideband is the only one to buy...a narrow band gauge is just gonna be a light show and not going to give you any useful info, save your pennys and don't waste it on one use the money towards a wideband...if you aren't going to do your own tuning you could get away with a basic unit that just displays the a/f ratio
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http://www.turbotektuning.com/shop/i...products_id=40 |
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Personally i run both b/c i don't have a WB gauge, nor do i want one as it would clash with my existing gauge setup. |
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but in reality, you were very wrong lol ;) here is what you said: Quote:
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Narrow bands react to slow to really be any use but if you feel more comfortable with the pretty lights more power to ya!! lol...I'd say its a stretch but yes you could use it to see somewhat of where you are at but I'd rather save the cash either way its like driving around not know whats going on with th A/F lol |
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