Blueplasticsoulman visited today.
Initial findings - Fuel trims at idle on petrol were close to zero (bank 2 trims a bit higher than bank 1), fuel trims at idle on LPG went a bit more negative on B1 and a bit positive on B2, No entries were made in LPG mapping screen (only autocal would have been done regards mapping), reference pressure set at 1.2 bar but actual pressure was 1.7 bar. Ginj was 4.5ms at idle which is a bit low duration for these spec injectors to work properly at, so at this point I anticipated the need to turn down reducer pressure.
I could correct the bank trim discrepancy at idle quite easily using a positive bank 2 trim figure and entering a slightly negative value in the idle area of mapping to get both banks trims very close to zero when running on LPG. The LPG ECU didn't support switching individual cylinders back to petrol, which would be a way of checking each engine cylinder's response when running on petrol or running on LPG (*later on I temporarily fit another Tartarini ECU that does have this facility). The ECU did feature sequential fuel changeover and the smoothness of changeover between fuels told me injector wiring / plumbing was correct (so input of petrol injector pulse for a certain cylinder results in gas injector pulse to the same cylinder).
Under the bonnet the Tartarini injectors (very similar to V30's) were quiet. The reducer vac reference pipe was simply hanging below the reducer, disconnected from the vac T, and the vac T had the missing pipe connection blanked. I checked the reducer vac pipe for gas leakage, it was fine, sucked on the pipe still fine and gas pressure went down when I sucked as it should. Reconnected the reducer to manifold vacuum and now reducer pressure was near the reference pressure of 1.2 bar - two problems sorted already (autocal wouldn't have worked well with 40% over reference pressure situation and gas injectors wouldn't have worked well pulsing at less than 4.5ms with colder gas).
At this point it would idle a bit more smoothly on LPG than on petrol, also pulled slightly more vacuum at idle on LPG than on petrol, confirmed by slightly lower MAF readings in OBD2 live data on LPG compared to petrol - If any difference at all it should need a bit more airflow to idle on LPG than on petrol with stoch afr. This points to a minor issue with the petrol system such as a dodgy petrol injector...
We went out and calibrated the LPG system, trims on petrol were all decent, matched trims on LPG to trims on petrol and confirmed by Pinj figures staying the same when switching between petrol and LPG. The original calibration won't have been right (as said the original calibration had only had autocal done), I had to enter figures that shifted within a range of around 20% from the autocal figures, it was previously running rich at idle and lean off idle, at least after I'd connected the vac pipe to the reducer, and won't have been running right with the vac reference not connected to the reducer.
The engine still idled better on LPG than on petrol. *I now disconnected the Tartarini ECU and connected another Tartarini ECU which allowed switching of individual cylinders back to petrol (easier to temporarily fit an old Tartarini ECU than a new say King ECU as the old system uses the old Tartarini style switch which other AEB systems are not compatible with), I only roughly mapped this ECU and only for idle conditions. The slight bank trim issue on LPG remained present, thus helping confirm a few things such as issues wouldn't be LPG ECU related. When I switched any cylinder back to petrol (except for what the LPG system sees as channel C on bank 1) Pinj remained the same. When I switched channel C on bank 1 back to petrol PINJ on bank 1 increased, meaning bank 1 ran leaner when this cylinder was switched to petrol. There is no need for the LPG system to be wired so that what the LPG system sees as bank 1 is the same as what the petrol ECU sees as bank 1, but earlier notes (comparing fuel trims to pinj readings) had confirmed that the installer in this case had wired the system so that the LPG's bank 1 is the same as the petrol bank 1. As long as the installer had wired the system so that channels ABCD ran from A at the front of the engine to D at the rear (which they will have) this would mean that channel C on bank 1 would be the engine's cylinder number 5, the 3rd cylinder from the front on the drivers side. Since fuel trims are more negative on bank 1 on either fuel, accentuated when running on LPG, and LPG vapour pressure isn't lost when running on petrol, this could imply that the petrol injector on cylinder 5 is constantly leaking a bit of fuel into cylinder 5 or that airflow into cylinder 5 isn't as high as on the other cylinders (valvetrain issue). Given the poorer idle on petrol compared to LPG it seems more likely that the petrol injector is a bit dodgy and leaky, else if it was a valvetrain issue would expect idle to be worse effected on LPG. It doesn't seem to be burning any oil etc. Chris is thinking about fitting new rocker cover gaskets, I suggested while the manifold is off he could swap pinj5 with one from the other cylinder bank, a test to see if the bank trim situation when running on petrol is reversed. If it is reversed then the real fix would be to sort out the dodgy petrol injector, but while a dodgy injector is fitted on the opposite bank the LPG calibration and bank trim should be adjusted to suit, I advised how to do this.
With hindsight there was one test that we didn't do - could have swapped the Ginj that feeds cylinder 5 with another Ginj (swapping both electrical connectors and both pipes). Perhaps we didn't do this because Chris had already been here for a long time, all seemed pretty conclusive, we were packing up anyway, and my dad's old best mate who's had several strokes and I haven't seen for a couple of years arrived unexpectedly wheel-chaired by his daughter just after we'd done the checks with the second LPG ECU. If the trims on petrol on B1 were not more negative than on B2 on either fuel then this is a test I would have done anyway, but given all the above I'm very confident this wouldn't have revealed a problem with ginj5 and that everything points to a dodgy pinj5. As said the 2nd ECU was only temporarily fitted to allow the injector test, there was no need to sell Chris any parts, all his LPG components seem in good working order and his system is calibrated much better now.
Simon