Dan_Austin Posted June 24, 2012 Share Posted June 24, 2012 I've been collecting parts for this for over a year. I will be pulling my tired NA 2.8 and dropping in a freshly rebuilt 83 L28ET starting next weekend. I am not going overboard, or at least not by HybridZ standards. The turbo is a T3/T4 hybrid 57 trim/63 A/R, DSM 440CC Lo-Z, six GM D585 coils, a e-bay 27x12x3 intercooler and most of the bits for a 3" exhaust. The last weeks have had me finishing the engine bay wiring harnesses and the under-dash harness. Today I had my first chance to plug the ECU into the dash harness and turn the key on. At first I was at a loss, nothing happened, then I noticed the serial plug was not fully seated. OK, now TS finds the ECU, but I did not get the priming pulse. Second oops. The fuel pump relay did not have 12V on pin 86. A few minutes later I had that fixed an now the ECU turns on and properly engages the fuel pump. The ECU harness is setup with the idea that it will mount in the factory location, with the relays mounted where the stock fuel pump/injector relay mounts and use a single connector to interface with the body harness. A nice extra is that I expect the new fuse block to fit in the old panel window for the factory ECU label. I still need to install the weatherpack connectors on the engine side of the ECU harness, which will be best handled after the new engine is in and the ECU in place. Each connector is labeled, numbered, and documented with an Excel spreadsheet for which wire (color&label) goes to each specific pin on each connector. 26 pins need to be terminated, but that should be fairly simple if I stick to the plan. I have to say that seeing Tuner Studio dispalying live readings for the first time is a huge rush... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan_Austin Posted July 4, 2012 Author Share Posted July 4, 2012 Having a plan is close to paying off. The old engine came out and then new one went in on Sunday. I found I had the wrong thermostat cover, so I started on the wiring. The weatherpack connectors made my life easier the couple of times I put a wire in rond place. No need to chop off an end and try again, just release it and put it in the right place. The sequencer came with 3' harnesses, which I thought might be short, but proved to be perfect for the sensors and injectors. I did need to splice six inch splice for the distributer and injectors. This is with the ecu in the factory location, with the fuses visible and accessable from the ecu inspection window, and finally the relays mounted in the stock location as well. I spent Monday installing the radiator and e-fan, intercooler and piping, and trying to find a thermostat cover locally. The local yards said they did not have one, but I went on a yard crawl today and found several after just a few minutes. So now the wiring is complete, the air tract is complete, all fluids are where they belong and staying there. I still need to find the tach lead on the passenger side, but that is the last non-tuning task. I barely got a pop ut of it today. I am on the latest B&G code, so I am still figuring out he DIY CAS wheel settings. I had the distributor 180 out, and a battery that needed a recharge. While waiting on that I reviewed all settings and found a huge error in injection timing angle that likely prevented injection events. With a bit of luck I'll be celebrating extra hard tomorrow. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan_Austin Posted July 4, 2012 Author Share Posted July 4, 2012 It's Alive! Turns out the distibutor was OK and now is 180 out, but it makes wiring a bit easier, so it stays were it is. I ended up opening the distributor up to count the slots, and guessed where in the pickup the optical sensor was, which suggested I needed a trigger offset of 150. With the distributor set for maximum mechanical advance I got a stumble, so I took another 10 degrees out of the trigger offset and it fired right up. I need to finish the exhaust and wire in the dash tach, but at least now I feel more confident that I'll have a way to get to work on Monday. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
24OZ Posted July 4, 2012 Share Posted July 4, 2012 Awesome! You must be feeling good, not long now. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan_Austin Posted July 9, 2012 Author Share Posted July 9, 2012 It took longer than expected to get access to a friends welder, but I finally had a chance weld up my 3" mandrel bent exhaust on Saturday. My friend was not happy with his welds on my test scraps, so he gave me a couple of tips and had me try. Turns out I have a knack for it and ended up welding up my entire exhaust systems as my first welding project. Once the exhaust was in, I could install the wideband and start tuning. I missed the third place in TunerrStudio that required wideband setup, but a quick Google search identified the fix and I now have the tune started, I took is out for a couple trips around the block. On the second loop I noticed copious whtie/grey smoke out the exhaust and almost paniced, but then I remembered noticing an excess of protective oil coating the mandrel bends. By the third loop of the 1/10th mile loop the smoke was gone and the VE Live Analyze was doing it's thing. I went over to show the result to my friend who had helped me with the engine swap and welding, He was surprised I had it moving on under power so soon and appearing ready for daily use. The exhaust tucks up nicely, but I do need another hanger just infront of the diff crossmember to have a really clean install. The downpipe did need dimpling to clear the firewall and bellhousing, but only a minor bit. Build recap- F54 block with fresh, but stock dished pistons P79 Head Shaved N42 intake with 240SX TB DIYAutoTune 280ZX CAS wheel ebay intercooler and piping 2.5" 3" mandrel bent exhaust with 3" Magneflow cat 450cc DSM blue top injectors Pallnet rail Aeromotive A1000-6 (pita to find fittings for) ebay 57/63 turbo with v-band integrated wastegate (8lbs) 82 NA 5 speed Fidanza flywheel, Spec XD pressure plate and HD organic plate OBX diff with 3.90 gears (needed to make tired old NA motor feel happy) Oh, and a B&G sequencer allowing for full sequential spark and fuel. It has been one heck of a week, or for that matter the last 13 months while I prepared for the actual swap. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Leon Posted July 9, 2012 Share Posted July 9, 2012 Heck of a job, Dan! Hope to see you out and about in your now-turbo Z! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan_Austin Posted August 3, 2012 Author Share Posted August 3, 2012 I now have about a full month living with the install. No major changes have been required. I added a GM EGR solenoid for a Fidle valve, and while it works it is a tad too small and only bumps the idle by about 75 RPM cold. I've identified a replacement with the same wiring connector but larger flow capacity, and need to get off my duff to go get one. The tuning has been 90% completed on the daily slog to and from work using VEAL, with tweaks made to handle oddball areas, such as engine braking causing very low map at the middle of the RPM scale. Today I decided to datalog the drive in as opposed to using VEAL to fine tune the map. I found that my cruise map is close to spot on with idle and those engine braking zones needing a bit of love. The attached zip is the MSQ and 24 minute datalog. EGO correction was minimal, basically only during engine braking, which I was please to see. The only other major discovery, which I knew, but is 100% confirmed is my alternator is not up to running the ECU and e-fans, at least not at idle. It also does not seem to be doing particularly well at cruise. This weekend is the 500 mile post break-in oil and filter change, with a lash check and 'nothing working loose' check. Feedback or critiques on the MSQ or log appreciated. My tune is doing almost exactly what I ask of it, but that I am asking it to do what is appropriate. I had a minor setback this week with the car stalling when coming to a stop, and found the cause to be the timing was about 3 degrees to far advanced at idle. 280z-sequencer.zip Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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