I've been helping Fez with his PCV so thought I'd post this to save everyone spending a fortune on ready made o2 eliminators from Dynojet, these resistors cost pence from Maplin, follow the link http://www.vfrdiscussion.com/forum/index.php/topic/20350-make-your-own-o2-sensor-eliminators/ It's the same for the Blade but obviously only 1 connector
Worked a treat, but its worth pointing out on my bike there was only 1 white wire, the other was black and white
Cool, all the eliminator does is make the bike think the lambda sensor is connected, so no F1 alarm light. The power commander completely controls the fuelling
The power commander controls the fuelling completely so long as you use the eliminator (resister) to fool the ecu
It's the missing heater the ECU reads, disconnecting the "data" side of the sensor simply stops said info from reaching the ECU, the "closed loop" term is just what discribes the sensor and the pulsed air intake..
I was just going from my data sheet on the pc. It said the low rpm was a closed loop controlled by the Readings from the o2 sensor and any adjustments from The PC are over riden, the only way to unlock this section Of map is to fit the o2 eliminator so when the pc makes The adjustments the bike doesn't see the change in Air/fuel so no compensation takes place.
Phantom if I'm reading your post right you need an o2 eliminator to make the PCV work properly controlling right through the rev range? Why don't they supply the PCV with what looks like just a simple plug? Ozz
Would I be correct in thinking that PCV's are not bike specific? Just the maps that are..? Could I potentially buy one off eBay with say an R1 map on it, wipe that off and install a map for my blade?
Not quite as simple as that. PCs can fit multiple bikes, but connectors can differ, so you need to research before buying one intended for a different model.