very valuable! You noticed a decrease in the actuator command in the FESExp_2505171346 file... but no error occurred during that time, and in the FESExp_2505171322 file... before the error occurred, the actuator command remained at a fairly constant level of 96.97. Similarly today. See attached files. I drove the same route and recorded the parameters according to your recommendation. The error occurred. When I do not have "ODO" data or what the check engine light status was, it is a bit difficult for me to determine the exact moment of the error, but approximately it was a time stamp of 519sec. And here again, the actuator was stable before the error occurred, although the difference in desired and actual boost pressure was in the range of 370-560mbar during the entire 9 seconds before the error occurred. The question is whether this is really the problem here?
There is one more aspect in all this that we should not forget about. We read signals from CANbus where individual frames are sent at speeds of up to 1Mbps. Our
MES registers about 26 parameter frames per second. I suppose that this results from the fact that it has to send a request for a specific frame and wait for a response if I understand the principle of the CAN bus correctly. Different frames have different priority levels and sometimes a few ms pass before the expected frame arrives. It is possible that our registration system does not see all the messages circulating in the CAN network.
Probably if we limited ourselves to just a few parameters we could register much faster. Example: let's take the file FESExp_2505171322... when an error occurred at time stamp 540.4sec the boost pressure value was 1947mbar registered by
MES. However, the freeze frame recorded by the ECU was 1031 mbar. See attached screenshot of freeze frame. This indicates that this is not exactly the same moment as the ECU records and the
MES records. Today, as before, the error occurred about 4 km after the start. This has happened several times in a row. Repeatability! Temperature dependence! It is possible that it depends on the incorrect electrical connection. Maybe we are close?
Today I did not managed to check more, and in addition it was raining like cats and dogs, a north wind of 65 km/h, but I will check the connections with the solenoid again in the next few days, but only after work. I did it last summer. All the ECU pins were sterile.
I would also like to try connecting an oscilloscope (pico) to the solenoid valve and drive the same route again to see what exactly was happening there when the error occurred. My Pico probably won't record too much, I just have to set some kind of threshold, the question is what but I'll try something.
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