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Cold weather behavior...

Started by derfdog15, December 14, 2016, 09:51:39 AM

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derfdog15

Hey guys,

As most of you know, I have a 2015 SHO which is my DD. I currently am running tuned, with an E20 blend, and mild bolt ons.

I noticed in the onset of full on winter weather (sub 32 degree temperatures all day) that my trans takes a long time to warm up(expected). Anyone know what the normal operating trans temp is on 6F55?

I also have noticed, when cruising, that RPM (in 6th) is higher at cruise, close to 2.5-3k, at 75-80mph. I am sure some of this has to do with the trans temp.

The final thing I noticed, Fuel Pressure is obnoxiously high IMO, like 4-6k high, while idling, and goes between 3-6k during cruise. I again, assume this is due to the cold, as it drove fine and never had issues in slightly warmer (35-40 ambient) or temps higher.

LTFT is also "stuck rich", since my STFTs are at 1.00 and LTFT stays greater than one.

This behavior all makes sense to me based on the weather, but I just wanted to see how other peoples ecoboosts behave in the cold.

Thanks guys.
2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

SHOdded

Trans warmup time can take a LOOONG time if mostly highway.  City driving, maybe 10-15 minutes.  In cold weather.

The N.O.T. is listed in the owner's manual as around 180-200F.
2007 Ford Edge SEL, Powerstop F/R Brake Kit, TXT LED 6000K Lo & Hi Beams, W16W LED Reverse Bulbs, 3BSpec 2.5w Map Lights, 5W Cree rear dome lights, 5W Cree cargo light, DTBL LED Taillights

If tuned:  Take note of the strategy code as you return to stock (including 3 bar MAP to 2 bar MAP) -> take car in & get it serviced -> check strategy code when you get car back -> have tuner update your tune if the strategy code has changed -> reload tune -> ENJOY!

derfdog15

Quote from: SHOdded on December 14, 2016, 10:58:16 AM
Trans warmup time can take a LOOONG time if mostly highway.  City driving, maybe 10-15 minutes.  In cold weather.

The N.O.T. is listed in the owner's manual as around 180-200F.

Thanks for the reply. That certainly explains it, as my commute to work is only about 10 minutes in city traffic, and I let the car warm up about 10 minutes before leaving, and it seems to behave normally near the end of the drive. On the weekends when I go out and about on the highway (maybe 10 miles one way at most, same warm up time) it takes a LOT longer to get to normal.

I think the best trans temp I have seen this past week is 135 degF. So definitely cold transmission.

That FL weather for Christmas is going to be wonderful.
2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

Gjkrisa

I think as long as them trans temp get over 70 it will be alright but I'm no mechanic... At -9 today my warm up temp is 127 only after doing some sliding in the snow I got the temp up to 170 after 5 minutes but watching the temps from a cold start the initial start the temp goes up a degree every second didn't wait very long to see when it slowed it was -30 that day.

Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk

2016 Taurus SHO pp Shadow Black
diy emblems,jms boost max, FORscan modder

AJP turbo

The torque converter may not be fully locked when cold which can raise the rpm a little...it may allow it to slip to help heat the fluid.

What do you mean high fuel pressure of 3-6k?..you logging in kpa?..usually part throttle fuel pressure is a few hundred psi

I dont think the bypass valve for the trans cooler opens until at least 180 and when it does open the fluid that goes to the radiator will get cooler too because you have the lower stat so rad temps may be down too

What do you mean stuck rich?...at warm up sometimes you are in open loop and there is no 02 feedback so stft will show 1.00 until they get warm or you enter closed loop
SCT Dealer/Custom Calibrator                        
Specializing in 3.5 Ecoboost   
Remote/email custom tuning including E85 blends 
Authorized retailer for all SCT devices. 
 
Former:2014 PP SHO
3 bar 93 tune, Airaid, Stainless Works non catted DP's  
405whp/520tq
Dyno
     
Current:2016 F150 2.7 Ecoboost
Tuning in progress

derfdog15

Quote from: AJP turbo on December 14, 2016, 11:34:07 AM
The torque converter may not be fully locked when cold which can raise the rpm a little...it may allow it to slip to help heat the fluid.

What do you mean high fuel pressure of 3-6k?..you logging in kpa?..usually part throttle fuel pressure is a few hundred psi

I dont think the bypass valve for the trans cooler opens until at least 180 and when it does open the fluid that goes to the radiator will get cooler too because you have the lower stat so rad temps may be down too

What do you mean stuck rich?...at warm up sometimes you are in open loop and there is no 02 feedback so stft will show 1.00 until they get warm or you enter closed loop


I can get a log of it later, and post it here/send it your way. I have been looking at the fuel rail pressure parameter which I believe is in KPA.

By stuck rich, I mean that even though STFTs are leveled at 1, the LTFT is greater than 1 constantly, and fuel economy has dropped off a bit (which I attribute to higher RPM and the fuel being commanded in a richer mixer). I know the E blend has affected economy a bit as well, but since I have been running it for a while now, I have gotten used to the E20 economy.

I was briefly watching the fuel rail pressure parameter and seeing high numbers the last few times I drove, which is why I posted here. There is no performance loss it seems, though I am not getting on it much due to weather/road conditions and the car still being somewhat cool.

As far as RPM/torque converter slip, that makes total sense, and I assumed it was holding a higher RPM to warm quicker.

Quote from: Gjkrisa on December 14, 2016, 11:33:41 AM
I think as long as them trans temp get over 70 it will be alright but I'm no mechanic... At -9 today my warm up temp is 127 only after doing some sliding in the snow I got the temp up to 170 after 5 minutes but watching the temps from a cold start the initial start the temp goes up a degree every second didn't wait very long to see when it slowed it was -30 that day.

Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk



Yeah it is typically warmed up to about 80 degrees before I leave home but takes a while to get up to/past the 120 mark. 
2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

AJP turbo

Rail pressure pid can be changed to psi...it should already be though from the config i sent

I wouldnt worry about the rail at part throttle its just following stock values

The fuel economy drop is all from E blend and idling

As long as the idle ltft is less than 1.05 i wouldnt worry...but i think you are mis interpreting the commanded afr.....you are not commanding a richer mix due to cold or E20....look at LAMBSE at idle it should be 1.00 meaning your afr commanded is about 13.75 or so because of the E blend

Your trims will do whatever is necessary to achieve the commanded afr which is also called LAMBSE....so if your fuel tuning was completely jacked up and ltft and stft was 1.15 but your lambse and lambda was 1.00 then you are getting the exact afr that is commanded
SCT Dealer/Custom Calibrator                        
Specializing in 3.5 Ecoboost   
Remote/email custom tuning including E85 blends 
Authorized retailer for all SCT devices. 
 
Former:2014 PP SHO
3 bar 93 tune, Airaid, Stainless Works non catted DP's  
405whp/520tq
Dyno
     
Current:2016 F150 2.7 Ecoboost
Tuning in progress

derfdog15

Quote from: AJP turbo on December 14, 2016, 12:07:27 PM
Rail pressure pid can be changed to psi...it should already be though from the config i sent

I wouldnt worry about the rail at part throttle its just following stock values

The fuel economy drop is all from E blend and idling

As long as the idle ltft is less than 1.05 i wouldnt worry...but i think you are mis interpreting the commanded afr.....you are not commanding a richer mix due to cold or E20....look at LAMBSE at idle it should be 1.00 meaning your afr commanded is about 13.75 or so because of the E blend

Your trims will do whatever is necessary to achieve the commanded afr which is also called LAMBSE....so if your fuel tuning was completely jacked up and ltft and stft was 1.15 but your lambse and lambda was 1.00 then you are getting the exact afr that is commanded

Gotcha. Thanks for the clarification. I may still grab a log just for peace of mind, but believe this to be 100% due to sub freezing temperature.
2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

AJP turbo

Hell yea send a loggy log my way
SCT Dealer/Custom Calibrator                        
Specializing in 3.5 Ecoboost   
Remote/email custom tuning including E85 blends 
Authorized retailer for all SCT devices. 
 
Former:2014 PP SHO
3 bar 93 tune, Airaid, Stainless Works non catted DP's  
405whp/520tq
Dyno
     
Current:2016 F150 2.7 Ecoboost
Tuning in progress

derfdog15

Quote from: AJP turbo on December 14, 2016, 12:12:23 PM
Hell yea send a loggy log my way

Will do Mr. Log Warlock.

Expect one in your inbox sometime between 5 and 7pm tonight. Probably won't wait a ton for the car to warm up, but I'll just log from the time I get in until I get home.

2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

SHOdded

By design, the trans bypass valve opens around 140 or 160F. Will have to check.  Since very little heat actually transfers from the engine to the transmission, only driving hard will raise trans temps quickly.   Which of course we DONT want to do.  So patience is key.

I think the ebs that use the 6f35 trans do have a trans warmer circuit builtin using engine coolant?  To go with the shutter thing.
2007 Ford Edge SEL, Powerstop F/R Brake Kit, TXT LED 6000K Lo & Hi Beams, W16W LED Reverse Bulbs, 3BSpec 2.5w Map Lights, 5W Cree rear dome lights, 5W Cree cargo light, DTBL LED Taillights

If tuned:  Take note of the strategy code as you return to stock (including 3 bar MAP to 2 bar MAP) -> take car in & get it serviced -> check strategy code when you get car back -> have tuner update your tune if the strategy code has changed -> reload tune -> ENJOY!

jbrown9999

I actually bought this because we've had some chilly temps here in UT this year and I know 75% of engine wear is caused at startup, especially in cold temps because the oil (synthetics also) are thicker and take time to get to the engine parts.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009Z2H71O/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

I should be able to get it installed and tied down tomorrow for this upcoming sub freezing weekend.

Based on this, maybe I should get a 2nd one for the tranny.
2016 Ford SHO w/ PP w/ SCT X4 w/ Gearhead tune,
MDesign CAI, non-noise maker pipe
Gapped/colder plugs, Thermostat w/ Water Wetter
MSD COPS, aFe Silver Bullet intake spacer
UPR catch can, BOV to atmosphere mod

Colorado-SHOBro

Quote from: SHOdded on December 14, 2016, 01:35:17 PM
By design, the trans bypass valve opens around 140 or 160F. Will have to check.  Since very little heat actually transfers from the engine to the transmission, only driving hard will raise trans temps quickly.   Which of course we DONT want to do.  So patience is key.

I think the ebs that use the 6f35 trans do have a trans warmer circuit builtin using engine coolant?  To go with the shutter thing.
To the best of my knowledge the open temp of the trans fluid thermostat depends on model. Cars with PP and aux trans cooler have a 160* and cars without 190*. I can't say this is 100% verified info but i  know i've seen it stated before and it seems accurate from the difference i saw when changing to just the colder trans fluid thermostat.
11' SHO Tuxedo Metallic black-non PP | Highly sophisticated high altitude custom AJP Turbo E30 3Bar tune w/Wastegate mod | Cat'd ceramic PPE downpipes |170 stat| SP542 plugs .028 | PP trans cooler | H&R springs | RX catch can

12.8@108 @ 6,000ft DA.

derfdog15

Quote from: jbrown9999 on December 14, 2016, 05:01:15 PM
I actually bought this because we've had some chilly temps here in UT this year and I know 75% of engine wear is caused at startup, especially in cold temps because the oil (synthetics also) are thicker and take time to get to the engine parts.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009Z2H71O/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

I should be able to get it installed and tied down tomorrow for this upcoming sub freezing weekend.

Based on this, maybe I should get a 2nd one for the tranny.

75% of my cold startups are from inside my garage, which is usually 15-20 degrees warmer than ambient so not super concerned on this. My engine warms up quick compared to the transmission, but both are not super quick. I sent AJP some logs, so he will probably chime in with what he sees.

Quote from: 8nutz8 on December 14, 2016, 05:53:48 PM
Quote from: SHOdded on December 14, 2016, 01:35:17 PM
By design, the trans bypass valve opens around 140 or 160F. Will have to check.  Since very little heat actually transfers from the engine to the transmission, only driving hard will raise trans temps quickly.   Which of course we DONT want to do.  So patience is key.

I think the ebs that use the 6f35 trans do have a trans warmer circuit builtin using engine coolant?  To go with the shutter thing.
To the best of my knowledge the open temp of the trans fluid thermostat depends on model. Cars with PP and aux trans cooler have a 160* and cars without 190*. I can't say this is 100% verified info but i  know i've seen it stated before and it seems accurate from the difference i saw when changing to just the colder trans fluid thermostat.

Seems reasonable, that said, I took some logs for AJP tonight, and saw a MAX trans temp of 141 degF. started from cold, after sitting 8 or so hours in the work parking lot. Drove to walmart. shopped a few minutes. Drove to Sams Club. Shopped a few minutes. Drove home. Let the car sit about 2 hours. Drove to get food (highway vs. city). Ate (about an hour). Drove back home (highway).

For both of the highway driving scenarios, trans started at ~115 degF.

All told, I think I just am paranoid because of how new this car is (a tick over a year from its build date), and what I have done to it in that time. But, even with the cold it still drives extremely well. You can feel the torque converter slip a bit around 35 mph in the city and lock/unlock causing a slight vibration until it shifts. This is a purely cold weather action, as it has never happened in warm weather. But easily fixed by paddle shifting to the next gear, or slightly pressing the gas.
2015 Tuxedo Black SHO PP -(SAE corrected): 369.4/451.4 - Gone to the automotive graveyard but not forgotten

2016 F150 FX4 Sport - 3.5L V6 Ecoboost - Stock for now

2003 Redfire V6 Mustang - Building to be an 11 second car

metroplex

The highest ATF temp I've seen is about 200F in the summer. In the winter (like 0F ambient), I'll usually see a high of about 130F-140F if I'm cruising. If I get on the gas a lot and the trans is shifting around, it'll go as high as 170F. An unlocked converter will increase the ATF temp more than a locked converter. I found that in the summer, if I keep the converter locked sooner and longer, I can drop the trans temp by 30F-40F in normal driving conditions.
Previously: 2014 SHO
12.4 @ 110.9 mph

Current: 2017 Fusion Sport