ARM based Unidentified Fueling Object - developer info!
The primary application for this board has changed as a result of the ArmEfi growing out of the EC36 connector and the box. The ArmUfo will use the 120X40X2.5mm box and the EC36 connector instead, while the ArmEfi is postponed until we find suitable connector and box.
This board is meant to be the right size for most cars in a standalone application and also scale well when used as a building block in a larger system.
Specification:
Case: Aluminium with 120x40x2.5mm profile.
Connector: AMP Econoseal III 36 pin.
Internal MAP: 4 bar sensor with a 5x3mm pneumatic connector on the front plate.
CAN: 1 internal, and 1 included in the EC36 connector as part of the VEMSLink interface.
WBo2: 1 channel with Plug-n-Play capability.
Sensor Inputs: IAT, CLT, TPS.
Trigger Inputs: 2 VR/Hall channels.
Ignition Outputs: 4 power stages, which can be configured for low voltage flyback (in hardware) if external power stages are used.
Injector Outputs: 6, high or low impedance with switched flyback.
Auxillary Outputs: 4 push/pull outputs (e.g. stepper motor), and 4 open-collector low-voltage flyback switches (e.g. fuel-pump relay, boost solenoid, variable cam timing, variable intake).
Case relevant issues
It is very important to have IO buttons (how many?) on the box, having a keyboard in the car at all times is not practical. This also makes it possible to make a compact hand held tuner that can tune the ArmEfi and other VEMS frontier products. I guess it is the question of a free digital or analog input(s), and the rest is mechanical (case) issue.
MMC slot ?
- I think the MMC can live inside, without the possibility of removing (maybe soldered)
- anyone insisting on removable MMC slot ?
This (armufo??) is a multi application board, it can be used for the following applications:
With (external ?) display and buttons:
- MAF replacement / MAF tuner.
- WBo2 Lambda meter (? why would someone use this instead of a standalone? maybe this is ment logger box with internal WBO2 controller )
- Boost controller.
- Exhaust temp meter.
- Additional fuel controller.
- Handheld tuner for ArmEfi and the other CAN enabled boards. I highly doubt that this would work. A logger and control board can be merged reasonably. A UI (user-interface) board cannot. (well, apexi makes profit from boost controllers made this way, but separated UI and controller is remarkably better).
- Entry level engine management system with integrated display (how?) and user interface.
See also
- VemsFrontier/Boards is the family where this belongs