Overboost protection and why it’s important

At Stratified we have recently launched a product called the Guardian Angel which is an overboost protection device for any gasoline fueled turbocharged vehicle.

We get a lot of questions about what such a device does and how it is better than the fuel/ignition cut that is available in most ECUs – so I thought I’d highlight how such a device can be effectively used.

The first thing to remember is that this device is DECOUPLED from the ECU as well as the boost control (both mechanical and electronic) system installed in the car. This makes it a true safety net should something happen.

For example, if a wastegate line pops off, the control system may reduce wastegate duty cycle, may initiate fuel cut, or may do both. However these responses often have delays built into them and do not IMMEDIATELY release boost pressure at the manifold which is what the Guardian Angel does. Whether your wastegate is not working, lines pop off, or you’re playing with the car’s tune and miss a number, the Guardian Angel will always be watching over the vehicle’s boost and preventing a catastrophic condition which often leads to a blown motor or bent rods. The rods below were bent from a 30psi boost spike on a Mazda DISI motor. The ECU just couldn’t react quickly enough to prevent the damage.

We’re not all expert tuners and most importantly we all make mistakes (even the pros) with the installation of parts and tunes. Parts fail all the time – at my most recent dyno day we had a wastegate line pop off that caused a 30psi+ spike – not something healthy for the motor. The last thing we watch at a track day is the boost gauge and this is what the Guardian Angel is constantly doing. It takes the worry out of driving the car in all conditions, installing new parts, and modifying tunes.

The Guardian Angel is easy to install and it works with any ECU or turbo configuration as long as the car is equipped with a push type/piston or diaphragm bypass or blowoff valve. So you can take this from a Mazda to a Honda to a Toyota and it will work the same way. If the device is triggered, you get a visual indicating (via the LED) and the overboost protection is a very gentle one. The ECU can only cut fuel/spark which is very hard on the motor and drivetrain. The Guardian Angel reduces boost but still allows you to keep your foot in it should you be in the middle of a pass for example. Last thing you want is to lose all power with incoming traffic. The Guardian Angel gives you the option to investigate the overboost condition when it is safe. See it in action in the videos below.

As an additional feature, we offer a external trigger for the Guardian Angel. Water/Methanol injection users that have failsafes try and reduce boost using the wastegate if the system fails or tank runs dry. This can be slow and if the wastegate fails it will be ineffective. Instead, you can attach your external trigger wire to the Guardian Angel from the WMI controller or any other ECU.

There have been a few independent review and install articles for the Guardian Angel and these are posted below. Remember that this device is universal to all turbocharged gasoline engines. If you have any questions, please Contact Us.

Guardian Angel Install and Review

Guardian Angel Install

Happy and safe boosting!

The Stratified Team

Stratified Went to Southern California for a Dyno Day!

Had the excellent opportunity to go down to So Cal for a MazdaSpeed Dyno Day at Church’s dyno facilities! The guys and gals there are a great group of enthusiasts and hosts and we all had a blast. Below are some pictures and sheets from the event.

First up was a Big Turbo MazdaSpeed6. This car was running a Precision 6031 turbo at 24-25psi, external wastegate, and a host of supporting mods including pre and post turbo water/methanol injection. He was getting tuned by Dustin Jones at PERM tuning and they were wrapping up VVT advance tweaks when Derek did his initial dyno pull. He put down a very healthy 405 whp. With just a couple of tweaks to timing and VVT advance Derek walked away with 431whp on the stock block which is very impressive. This was the highest horsepower car at the event – great job on building this beast Derek! It’s a mean street machine, sounds and looks the part.

Notice the Stratified Guardian Angel below watching over any overboost conditions and keeping the engine safe.

A few Gen2 MazdaSpeed3’s dynoed as well. The car below is John’s bolted Speed3 and this is the first iteration of a Stratified Custom Tune on his car. No E85 used here and he hit an even 300 whp and 370 ft lbs of torque on California 91 octane fuel.

A mild 25% mix of E85 does wonders on the MazdaSpeed cars. The following car is another bolted second generation MS3 with a Stratified E85 Custom Tune. This customer was able to hit 400 ft lbs of torque and 338whp! This is still on the stock turbo and engine.

All in all, a great time was had by all, and I thank the Nator group of enthusiasts of So Cal for the gracious hosting and excellent times! Hope to be back there soon. A couple of more images below!

The Stratified Team

Knock Retard (KR) Explained

Knock Detection and mitigation is a very important aspect of the control system of modern vehicles. The availability of very fast ECUs and wideband knock sensors makes it possible for the ECU to adapt the ignition timing to different fuel qualities, temperatures, boost pressures etc. to prevent damage to the engine and achieve maximum performance.

The Mazdaspeed / Mazda MPS vehicles make use of a good knock detection system that is a very good tool used for tuning as well as for maintaining safe operation of the vehicle in variable conditions.

A lot of people datalog the KR (Knock Retard) parameter and have questions regarding what it is really telling them about how their car is running and this is not just Mazdaspeed specific. Essentially the KR value is the amount of timing in degrees that the ECU is pulling from the base map once the knock sensor has picked up noise that it has interpreted as knock. Often, the interpreted knock is very much real while other times it may be something else. I want to clarify several nuances which may spike KR that are NOT caused by detonation and the timing curve.

1. Spool up KR. Here you will see a bit of KR (anything under 1.0 I just take as a “we’ve reached the efficient point” sign). This is common and should not to worry you as long as it dies down like it does here and does not exceed 2.0. Remember the ECU drops KR in steps over a certain period of time and you can see this here and in all logs. If the KR is dropping it means no more knock is detected and the ECU is returning the timing to the base table. Why is there KR in this log? Look at the BATs (Boosted Air Temperature) – they are fairly high just as the boost pressure is climbing.

2. High RPM KR that is a result of mechanical noise/shifting. In the same log  over 6K RPM there is a 0.7-1.0 or so of KR creeping in. This is a sign of mechanical noise but at 0.7 it’s not something to really worry about. Then take a look at the 2.1 KR value before it goes to 0. That is where the driver let off the throttle and the motor moved in the engine bay causing mechanical noise. This is very common in this vehicle – a fast spike just as you shift or right when you let go of the throttle. This is not knock – just the engine moving around in the engine bay – don’t worry about this. You can decrease the sensitivity of the sensor in the high RPM region if the tuning tools allow you. However if it is very high KR (2-3+), you’re either indeed detonating or have a VERY noisy engine (see comment below)

If you see consistent high KR (5+ during WOT runs in this case) and it is not due to timing or during shifting this is caused by other mechanical parts. Anything from a timing chain, to injector seals, to a bent rod. So keep an eye and diagnose this instead of trying to tune around it. Below is what turned out to be KR caused by a bent rod. As you can see it ramps right up to the max 5.95 allowable in this tune at WOT and sits there regardless of timing (which drops into negative numbers).

3. Cold engine KR. When the car is not fully warmed up (even if the temperature gauge tells you it’s fine) you may experience more KR than usual going up in the RPM range or under boost. This is because the engine internals have not reached operating temperature and expansion and are just noisier. Rule of thumb is to drive the car for at least 15 minutes before doing full WOT runs … or to get an oil temperature gauge. Either way, if the car is cold, it’s best to let it warm anyways before really getting on it so this KR serves as a friendly reminder.

Part throttle KR got first generation MazdaSpeed vehicles – some insight

I have recently swapped out the ECU in our shop car for the latest part from Mazda (It’s a gen1 2008.5). This is a different part number from what came in the car and it supersedes all other ECU part numbers for gen1s (there are many). The interesting aspect is that the part throttle and warm-up KR have significantly decreased or completely disappeared with no other changes to the car. Before readings in the 5-6+ KR range were normal as the car warmed up or on the first run of the day as well as at part throttle. Now they are either at 1* KR or below. No hardware changes, no tuning changes, no weather changes, just an ECU swap.

Now how does this play into the whole KR bit? While we have access to some of the knock sensor tuning tables via COBB AccessTuner and VersaTuner, we don’t have access to the filtering algorithm (in the ECU firmware) or hardware. Remember that the knock sensor is a microphone and the ECU filters that signal to interpret knock. Mazda may have updated the hardware or algorithms responsible for this. This is further supported by the fact that the newer cars (gen2) don’t suffer from this “part throttle knock” syndrome nearly as much as the gen1s.

What does this mean? Well it means that the algorithm was perhaps overly sensitive picking up “false knock” initially and not just scaring enthusiasts but losing some efficiency at part throttle since timing was lowered. This can also put to rest some of the fears that people (mainly gen1 owners) have when they see high part throttle KR readings.