Ok may be a stupid question but whats the difference between a wideband and narrow band a/f meter? Do I have to have a wideband to monitor or is a narrow sufficient?
Ok may be a stupid question but whats the difference between a wideband and narrow band a/f meter? Do I have to have a wideband to monitor or is a narrow sufficient?
To keep it simple:
Wideband:
Shows actual air to fuel ratio.
Precise, but costs more.
Required for FI vehicles and heavily modded vehicle, actually any vehicle if you want to maximize performance.
Narrowband:
Basically it only indicates a lean or rich ratio, it doesn't show actual a/f content. Cheap cost.
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'94 Chevy Truck: 8.9 et, 408 twins
To be more specific, the wideband measures the mass of air to fuel. The lower the number the less air which means the richer you are, and vice versa. Definitly get a wideband
~ Forged engine of some type ~ Ball bearing turbo of an unconfirmed size ~ 4L8000 trans ~ Beefy fuel system ~
OK. Thats the answer I was looking for. Allen do your Interceptors monitor A/F? And what do they cost?
2004 Silverado Crew Cab, forged iron 5.7, STS w/MP turbo, 10+ psi, FMIC, Tial 50mm BOV, Vic Jr, Snow performance meth, MTI Stealth cam .220/.220 .581/.581 115lsa, Comp chromoly pushrods, Yank TT3000 stall, LS1 Efans, 160 tstat, Trucool 40k trans cooler, 60# injectors, Walbro fuel pump, Patriot springs, Built 4l65E w/billet input & output shafts, Eaton posi, SD tuned...all installed by Klein North Automotive
Narrow is only accurate near stoich (14.7:1) AFR.
The PLX stuff just dropped in price from $10 to $20.
Decide what you're going to monitor and how many gauges you want to clutter up the inside. Because, plx has a multi function gauge that monitors OBD2 data, and allows you to attach modules for boost, pressure and wideband readings, all in one gauge, with thresholds that can be set, and viewable in digital, analog or graph, also allows you to choose which parameters you want displayed.
Or, you can just get the three pod setup, a/f ratio, boost, interceptor setup.
check it out at PLX Devices Inc. - Multi Gauges, Single Gauges, Sensor Modules, Wideband Air Fuel Ratio, Data Logging, Fuel Saving / Scan Tools
multi gauge.
Then add modules as you need them.
They finally came out with a fuel pressure gauge as well!
I'm pulling all my crap out of the avalanche if you're interested.
Here's what's in it:
AEM wideband
Interceptor
Autometer:
Boost
Fuel Pressure
Nelson Performance
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'94 Chevy Truck: 8.9 et, 408 twins