Blow off valve: Difference between revisions

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a.k.a. "BOV"
a.k.a. "BOV"


Valve which relieves charge pressure by venting air to atmosphere.
Valve which relieves charge pressure by venting air to the atmosphere.


Prevents [[turbo surge]], but may affect [[LTFT]]s.
Prevents [[turbo surge]], but may affect [[LTFT]]s.
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This fudge factor (both in partial and wide open throttle operation) is almost impossible to properly correct for, since it varies wildly depending on driving conditions and driver behavior.
This fudge factor (both in partial and wide open throttle operation) is almost impossible to properly correct for, since it varies wildly depending on driving conditions and driver behavior.


For this reason, any street car that uses [[MAF]]s upstream of a charge pressure relief system should be equipped with [[bypass valve]]s. In racing applications, the use of BOVs is common since partial throttle behavior is unimportant, and non-coasting/non-braking driving conditions are almost always WOT. The LTFT function is often entirely disabled.
For this reason, any street car that uses [[MAF]]s upstream of a charge pressure relief system should be equipped with [[bypass valve]]s. In racing applications, the use of BOVs is common since partial throttle behavior is unimportant, and non-coasting/non-braking driving conditions are almost always [[wide open throttle]]. The LTFT function is often entirely disabled or non-existant, since a standalone EMS is generally used (such as Motec).

[[Category:Tuning]]

Latest revision as of 00:28, 2 September 2006

a.k.a. "BOV"

Valve which relieves charge pressure by venting air to the atmosphere.

Prevents turbo surge, but may affect LTFTs.

How? BOVs can release measured air from the intake system, and when they do, they make the ECU "think" there is more air in the combustion chamber than there really is. This will cause the car to run rich during closed loop operation, and to compensate, LTFTs will go down. However the car may still run rich (or lean) during closed loop operation, since the LTFTs only reflect recent condions, and if the BOVs are venting more (or less) often than they were recently, the LTFT will be wrong. To make matters worse, the car can also run rich open loop, again depending on how much air was lost while the BOVs were venting.

This fudge factor (both in partial and wide open throttle operation) is almost impossible to properly correct for, since it varies wildly depending on driving conditions and driver behavior.

For this reason, any street car that uses MAFs upstream of a charge pressure relief system should be equipped with bypass valves. In racing applications, the use of BOVs is common since partial throttle behavior is unimportant, and non-coasting/non-braking driving conditions are almost always wide open throttle. The LTFT function is often entirely disabled or non-existant, since a standalone EMS is generally used (such as Motec).