Well, it's been awhile - so more of just a 'wrap up' than anything else at the moment...
It's been running spot on on petrol - nice even fuel trims, and got decent amount of poke. I had a time where I gave it some right foot coming off a roundabout and I couldn't get it to go above about 3K, no matter how much I tried.. I have since tried it again on a trip back from the workshop when joining the main road, but this time in sport mode and it pulled up to about 4K - by which point I was already doing 60, so backed off. So I am thinking my issue with the struggle before is the autobox, rather than engine... It's always seemed to have a mind of it's own - but bunging it in sport mode definitely makes it feel more alive...
I've been away a fair bit for work, so I haven't had the chance to drive it much, and still haven't cracked 1K miles yet! but I'm planning on doing it's first oil change at the end of next week when I'm back from work - I'll take it up to the workshop on the weekend and do it all then. I'm going to aim to do the diff oils aswell and at least check the level on the transfer case, as that was new not too many miles ago.
LPG - well, I decided to get individual Hana injectors, so I could mount them lower in the inlet manifold and then hopefully save some space under the bananas, where the rails of 4 were catching. Well, that didn't go so well, as even though the injectors were lower (about 40mm of hose from injector to manifold on each one... the individual feeds to them meant they took up a load more space with the feed pipes to the injectors, so after a lot of cursing and swearing, I went back to the drawing board (maybe if I'd got the 'rail' type single injectors and hose adapters that came out at 90 degrees it would have worked, but hey..) I ended up going back to my original rails of 4 injectors and looking at what was hitting on these before, came to the conclusion that the individual superseal connectors on these were what was causing the crush.
So I went a bit off-track, and got the dremel out and cut the connectors off, exposed the metal terminals to the injector coils from the moulded plastic, and then soldered my own wiring on, which I then ran to a 5 way superseal connector (common ground and the 4 injector feeds). I then fitted 5 way superseal connectors to the LPG wiring loom under the bonnet, to match the ones on my modified rails. A dash of hot glue later to seal all around the solder connections on the top of the coils (to prevent any electrical shorting, and to keep moisture etc out) and I had a pair of 4 way injector rails, which are about 20mm shorter than before with the individual superseal connections.
The coils on these Hana injectors are all individually replaceable - so in future, if I decide to remove them for any reason, I should be able to get replacement coils, with connectors and they are back to stock...
After a test fit, and now finding that the upper inlet manifold fits in nicely, with just enough room, I took it back off again to finish tidying things up. I had some of the split plastic cable loom insulation, so have wrapped this over the top of the wiring on the injector banks aswell, which is then cable tied in place. It's probably overkill, but I wanted another (thicker) layer of protection between the wiring and the metal of the plenum in the case of any vibrations etc (though in theory the injector banks should be moving with the engine, since they are attached to the fuel fail!)
The hoses from injectors to the inlet manifolds are now about 8-10cm long (I didn't measure them! but they are all fairly even!) and it's all plumbed back in and back together.
Once the upper manifold was on and bolted down lightly, I removed the gas ECU and got the multimeter out to make sure that I had a connection between the appropriate ground wire in the loom, and each injector coil - which I did, for all 8 :) also checked for any shorts to ground on both the injector rail common and the 8 individual injector wires.
Wiring all checked out, resistance measured on each coil wire was pretty much identical across the board - so with that added reassurance that I hadn't damaged anything in installation, or squished/shorted something, I finished the reassembly.
Ran it on petrol again yesterday to make sure I hadn't messed anything up on that side of things, or there wasn't any vacuum leaks etc, and all happy there.
Got the laptop out today and ran the auto calibrate on the LPG system, after verifying it would switch to gas and run (badly) without any errors flagging in the ECU.
Got it to auto calibrate, and immediately idle was a lot better, so took it out for a drive to the courier drop off for a BECM I'd worked on and was sending back. Ran nice on gas, with lots of pull...
Got home and checked the fuel trims.. waaaaaaaayyyy out... (multi trims were down to about .86 on both bamks) looked like it was running silly rich on gas - then realised I had calibrated with the reducer pressure set to 1.1bar, but the actual gas rail pressure reading about 1.4bar... Changed it to 1.4 bar in the setup, and then re-ran th calibration... looked at the map afterwards, and the values are a lot lower than they were before...
Ran out of time after that to take it for another drive, but I'll take it out again tomorrow to see how it behaves and also check the fuel trims again when I get back.
All in all though - I'm happy to have it (finally) back running on gas again
If I were doing it again, I'd probably just cut the webbing between the bananas and then run longer hoses through and mount injectors on top of the sausages. My only worry doing that would be that they'd end up being horizontally mounted (or use Matrix injectors) to fit between plenum and bonnet without catching.
Why didn't I do it this time... I figured I could get the injectors to fit under the manifold (there is a LOT less space though than it looked when I had it mocked up on the bench, by the time there is gas feeds, wiring, injectors all fighting for real estate in there!), and was determined to do it... also with the fact that previously they were out the back of the manifold, and the feed pipes to the inlet were right on the limit of what's recommended - if not a bit longer - and it was definitely noticeable in the throttle response. Now I have the injectors fitted under the manifold, when I took it for the drive today, the throttle response (to me anyway) was as instantaneous as on petrol.
Also, with the new engine, and the torquemax cam, I wanted to give it the best chance at running properly on gas as I could, rather than just go 'sod it' and take the easy way out of remounting the injectors at the back of the engine.
So the LPG setup at the moment is:
Zavoli Alisei (AEB) ECU ('C' Series, going by the stamp on the ECU casing)
Zavoli Zeta/S reducer (bought a new one as I figured it was just as easy as buying an over haul kit for the 8 yr old one!)
2x Hana 2001 Gold 4cyl/rail injectors, with 2.1mm (two stripe) nozzles
Will see how the fuel trims look tomorrow and will report back... i'm guessing it will probably need a bit of tweaking whilst under driving conditions, but that's definitely a 2 person job!