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Author Topic: Porsche 944 ls swap  (Read 41497 times)

Ntrain2k

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #60 on: July 27, 2017, 07:56:47 PM »



I'm kinda tired of fucking with it TBH. Feels like it's never going to be done.

All projects seem like that when you have real life involved man. Hang in there.
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crxvtec91

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #61 on: July 28, 2017, 03:10:40 PM »

Just one thing at a time, get it done!
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My build thread; http://www.realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/index.php?topic=2444.0


I like my girls like I like my cars, rich and retarded.

rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #62 on: August 06, 2017, 08:54:15 AM »





Painted it halfassedly



Bought stuff to start building the new gauge cluster. Using an arduino with a can-bus sheild for tach/water temp. I've got a marine GPS unit for 38 bucks off ebay that is 16,000 pulse per mile that I'm using for speed. The pixel ring will be used for a visual tach representation also.  I've got a 4th numeric display I might make cycle through a few things with a radio button.
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #63 on: August 19, 2017, 11:22:22 PM »

https://scontent-sjc2-1.cdninstagram.com/t50.2886-16/20996909_338132696627937_4501924027484340224_n.mp4

Wasn't really happy with the gauge situation and I didn't want to spend 500 bucks on some homo ass autometer shit so that's where I'm at right now with the cluster.
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random-strike

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #64 on: August 22, 2017, 03:56:36 PM »

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Tim

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #65 on: August 22, 2017, 08:12:16 PM »

mmm, geeky shit.  I like it
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Eggylshatch

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #66 on: August 25, 2017, 02:24:04 PM »

Fuck yeah. Some serious nerd shit right there. I think that the "SRT4s beaten" category has to stay. Pure awesome.
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #67 on: August 25, 2017, 02:57:07 PM »

I was just going to take some plastic and cut out gauge holes but then I couldn't think of how to mount it in the dash without looking like assholes.

I wondered if I could fab some shit up for the displays to fit in the stock bezels in tinkercad and it looked like buttholes  but wasn't too bad but the polygon count is absolute trash in tinkercad.




Some dude told me about autodesk fusion (free for hobbiest) and I made a base bezel to work off then added the gauge shit in and I'm pretty happy with them.







Found some guy online to 3d print all 3 for 70 bucks. I dont think that's a bad deal at all for a completely custom part. I know they're not going to look perfect but nothing about this car is :mexi:
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #68 on: August 25, 2017, 02:58:47 PM »

Fuck yeah. Some serious nerd shit right there. I think that the "SRT4s beaten" category has to stay. Pure awesome.

One of my friends has an srt4 and I put that in there to fuck with him lol.  I had another video of the alphanumeric display cycling through FUCK YOU JAKE :evil:
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turbohf

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #69 on: August 25, 2017, 11:25:51 PM »

im super excited to see how those gauges come out. 3d printed oe integration of cheap gauge setup.  :Jew:
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Dustin  :Jew:
1987 Buick Regal Limited 6.0L/4L80E (LQ4, 862 heads, tbss intake, 92mm tb, e1841p cam, Holley EFI)
2000 Silverado LS 5.3L Reg Cab Short Bed
1966 Chevy II Nova 400 4dr Sedan V8


'Faster, Faster, until the thrill of speed overcomes the fear of death.'

rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #70 on: August 29, 2017, 10:30:05 PM »



The prints turned out kinda sketch. The guy was using filament not ment for his printer so parts of the bottoms didnt layer correctly but it was half the price of anyone else  :Jew:




Permanently wired



Bright as fuck in the bezels  O0 :mexi: :noel:
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Ntrain2k

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #71 on: August 30, 2017, 05:31:26 AM »

nice
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Eggylshatch

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #72 on: August 31, 2017, 05:22:06 PM »

Maybe some tint over the gauge faces? Bright lights at night drive me nuts, maybe you don't mind though. Overall that's going to be tits. Where did you find the guy to do the custom 3d printing?
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #73 on: August 31, 2017, 08:44:57 PM »

Maybe some tint over the gauge faces? Bright lights at night drive me nuts, maybe you don't mind though. Overall that's going to be tits. Where did you find the guy to do the custom 3d printing?

I have tinted plexiglass to cover them but I don't have any way to cut perfect circles in it.

I got the prints from 3dhubs.com
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Tim

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #74 on: August 31, 2017, 08:53:17 PM »

programming the arduino to talk over can something a simpleton might be able to do?
I may have a need to gather info over can-bus, but the catch is it isn't the standard automotive protocol.
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #75 on: August 31, 2017, 09:51:53 PM »

Should be simple enough.  Industrial can stuff should be easier in theory since industrial stuff has better documentation. Auto manufactures try to obstruficate a lot of their stuff intentionally and wont provide documentation for anything that's not government mandated.
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #76 on: September 26, 2017, 02:20:29 PM »

I've made some progress but I can't get the car to not big on hard launches. It will burn out on gravel but when I try on asphalt it seems like it goes in limp mode or something
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #77 on: November 15, 2017, 11:03:09 PM »


Not a lot of progress lately. I had an unexpected excavation bill due to the water main breaking in my front yard. Didn't have water for most of October but it's all good in the hood now.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXsRqNo3dfw&feature=youtu.be


https://scontent.cdninstagram.com/t50.2886-16/22182105_348618045580956_2997113339760345088_n.mp4


Almost all of the dash shit works now. If any of you guys want to do the same type of shit, it can be ported over to most other odb2 cars pretty easily. Pre odb2 would need to abuse more analog inputs and would require some custom circuitry but it's not rocket science. Just voltage dividers and pulse counting and shit.
« Last Edit: November 15, 2017, 11:16:00 PM by rawr »
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Ntrain2k

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #78 on: November 16, 2017, 07:28:49 PM »

sweet
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #79 on: November 27, 2017, 10:43:23 PM »





I had to fight for a few days to finally figure out how to talk to the new adapter.

 It turns out J1850 VPW has an extra header byte so I had to shift the indexes on where I was pulling data on my serial calls.

Voltage isn't working right now but it's trivial to fix. I need to figure out how to get it to poll a little faster to make it run more smoothly.

Right now the solution has been to add a counter function to the calls and only poll IAT, water temp and volts once every 400 loops and poll rpm every loop.

It should run a lot faster. There are people who have been able to get 26ms latency with this controller. I might need to flash the firmware to be able to kick the baud rate up.

If I could get a sample every 50ms I think that would be smooth enough. If not I suppose i could just add some smoothing function to the visuals on the tachometer? IDFK.

The speedometer is GPS and runs off a completely different arduino so I can dedicate its functions to reading every single pulse without having to add a one second delay in the loop of the other arduino for pulse counts. Ive tested it quite a bit and it's very accurate. Fortunately I didn't need to write a lot of code for that as I was able to just use another speedometer program someone had made for a toyota and an arduino and change the math on the pulse count pin for my GPS sender.

Here's the main code I'm currently using if you fgts want to try something. If you try it on anything not J1850 VPW, you're going to have to change the rxdata index to 6 instead of 9 and 6 / 9 on the RPM instead of 9/12 due to GM having an extra byte.

Code: [Select]
#include <Adafruit_NeoPixel.h>
#include <Adafruit_NeoPixel.h>
#include <gfxfont.h>
#include <Wire.h>
#include <LCD.h>
#include <LiquidCrystal_I2C.h>
#include <Adafruit_GFX.h>
#include "Adafruit_LEDBackpack.h"


int pixelPin = 6;
int sensorValue = 0;  // variable to store the value coming from the sensor
int level = 0;
int pixels = 24;

//Set up ring buffer
char rxData[20];
char rxIndex=0;

Adafruit_7segment matrix = Adafruit_7segment();
Adafruit_AlphaNum4 alpha = Adafruit_AlphaNum4();
Adafruit_7segment matrix2 = Adafruit_7segment();
Adafruit_7segment matrix3 = Adafruit_7segment();


#define I2C_ADDR    0x3F  // Define I2C Address where the SainSmart LCD is
#define BACKLIGHT_PIN     3
#define En_pin  2
#define Rw_pin  1
#define Rs_pin  0
#define D4_pin  4
#define D5_pin  5
#define D6_pin  6
#define D7_pin  7
#define PIN 6
const int BRIGHTNESS = 50;
const int LED_COUNT = 80;
const int REDLINE = 5000;
const int WARN_RPM = 3500;
const int WARN_INTERVAL = 70;
const int numReadings = 30;     // the number of readings for average brightness
int readings[numReadings];      // the readings array for the analog input
int index = 0;                  // the index of the current reading
int total = 0;                  // the running total
int average = 3;
uint8_t previousBrightness = 0;    // typical operation display brightness
uint8_t currentBrightness = 100;   // typical operation diaplay brightness
uint8_t daytimeBrightness =100;   // brightness for when headlampStatus is TRUE
uint8_t nighttimeBrightness = 127;  // brightness for when headlampStatus is FALSE


uint8_t numberOfRingLED = 24;
int engineSpeed = 0;

String headlampStatusString = ""; // contains "t" if headlamps are on, "f" if they are off
String curHeadlampStatus = "";    // to detect changes in state
String prevHeadlampStatus = "";

int newEngineSpeedData = 0;
int newHeadlampStatusData = 0;

int minRPM = 500;   // RPM where the first LED will light
int maxRPM = 5800;  // RPM where the last LED will light
int LEDsForRPM = numberOfRingLED;  // the number of LED's used for RPM display - it could be less than the max if you like

int peakHoldLedPos = 0;     // position of the sticky LED
int peakHoldTime = 3000;    // number of milliseconds to keep the peak rpm lit up for
long peakHoldStartMs = 0;   // the millis() value when setting the sticky LED

// we dont need to redraw the display if it is the same as the last time
int RPMpreviousNumLED = 0;  // the number of RPM LED previously lit up
int RPMcurrentNumLED = 0;   // the current number of RPM LED lit up

float incrementRPM = ( maxRPM - minRPM ) / LEDsForRPM;

String stringToParse;



long prevMillis = 0;  // for the sticky LED
long myMillis = 0;

Adafruit_NeoPixel ring = Adafruit_NeoPixel(24, PIN, NEO_GRB + NEO_KHZ800);
LiquidCrystal_I2C  lcd(I2C_ADDR, En_pin, Rw_pin, Rs_pin, D4_pin, D5_pin, D6_pin, D7_pin);
uint32_t color = ring.Color(255, 0, 0);

byte fuelLeft[] = {
  B11111,
  B10001,
  B10001,
  B11111,
  B11111,
  B11111,
  B11111,
  B11111
};
byte fuelRight[] = {
  B00000,
  B00000,
  B10000,
  B01000,
  B00100,
  B00100,
  B11000,
  B00000
};


void setup() {
  Serial.begin(9600);
  lcd.begin(20, 4);
  lcd.createChar(0, fuelLeft);
  lcd.createChar(1, fuelRight);
  matrix.begin(0x70);
  matrix2.begin(0x73);
  ring.setBrightness(BRIGHTNESS);
  matrix3.begin(0x72);
  matrix.println(0);
  matrix.writeDisplay();
  matrix2.println(0);
  matrix2.writeDisplay();
  //matrix3.println("0");
  //matrix3.writeDisplay();
  ring.begin();
  ring.show();
  theaterChaseRainbow(5);
  lcd.setBacklightPin(BACKLIGHT_PIN, POSITIVE);
  lcd.setBacklight(HIGH);
  TCCR1A = 0; //Configure hardware counter
  TCNT1 = 0;  // Reset hardware counter to zero
  lcd.home();
  lcd.print("LOADING ODB i/o");
  ODB_init;
}

char displaybuffer[4] = { ' ', ' ', ' ', ' ' };
//delete
  uint32_t Wheel(byte WheelPos) {
    WheelPos = 255 - WheelPos;
    if (WheelPos < 85) {
      return ring.Color(255 - WheelPos * 3, 0, WheelPos * 3);
    }
    if (WheelPos < 5800) {
      WheelPos -= 85;
      return ring.Color(0, WheelPos * 3, 255 - WheelPos * 3);
    }
    WheelPos -= 5800;
    return ring.Color(WheelPos * 3, 255 - WheelPos * 3, 0);
  }

void theaterChaseRainbow(uint8_t wait) {
     
  for (int j = 0; j < 256; j++) {   // cycle all 256 colors in the wheel
    for (int q = 0; q < 3; q++) {
      for (int i = 0; i < ring.numPixels(); i = i + 3) {
        ring.setPixelColor(i + q, Wheel((i + j) % 255)); //turn every third pixel on
      }
      ring.show();

      delay(wait);

      for (int i = 0; i < ring.numPixels(); i = i + 3) {
        ring.setPixelColor(i + q, 0);      //turn every third pixel off
      }
    }
  }

}



  void werkit(int i) {

    level = 1024 / i;
    checkColor(level);
    for (int i = 0; i < level; i++) {
      ring.setPixelColor(i, color);
    }
    for (int i = 25; i > level; i--) {
      ring.setPixelColor(i, 0, 0, 0);
    }
    ring.show();
    delay(5);
  }

 
  void clear() {
    for (int i = 0; i < pixels; i++) {
      ring.setPixelColor(i, 0, 0, 0);
      ring.show();
    }
  }


  void checkColor(int level) {
    if (level < 5) {
      color = ring.Color(255, 0, 255);
    }
    else if (5 < level && level < 18) {
      color = ring.Color(255, 255, 0);
    }
    else if (level > 18) {
      color = ring.Color(255, 0, 0);
    }
  }


void drawRing( void ){
 
  // if there is valid data then we should update the display.
         
             
             // turn everything off
             for( int i = 0; i < numberOfRingLED; i++ ){
               
                ring.setPixelColor( i, 0, 0, 0 );
             
             }
             
             // calculate the number of LEDs to light up           
             RPMcurrentNumLED = ( engineSpeed - minRPM ) / incrementRPM;  // round the number of LEDs to light to the lowest integer

             
             // prepare to turn them on, if the new number of LED to light is different than the old number to light
             if( RPMcurrentNumLED != RPMpreviousNumLED ){
               
               
               
                 // set all LEDs to light to green to start
                 for( int i = 0; i < RPMcurrentNumLED; i++ ){
                   
                    ring.setPixelColor( i, 0, 40, 0 ); // green
                   
                 }
                 
                 
                 
                 // if the RPM is  high, set some intermediary yellows
                 if( RPMcurrentNumLED >= ( LEDsForRPM - 7 ) ){
                   
                   for( int i = ( LEDsForRPM - 7 ); i < RPMcurrentNumLED; i++ ){
                   
                    ring.setPixelColor( i, 80 , 40, 0 ); // yellow
                   
                   }
                   
                 }
                 
               
                 // if the RPM is really high, set the last 4 LED's red
                 if( RPMcurrentNumLED >= ( LEDsForRPM - 4 ) ){
                   
                   for( int i = ( LEDsForRPM - 4 ); i < RPMcurrentNumLED; i++ ){
                   
                    ring.setPixelColor( i, 80, 20 , 0 ); // red
                   
                   }
                   
                 }
                 
                 // also, I want whichever the highest LED that is currently on to be red, like a pointer
                 // this is probably redundant with the sticky led?
                 ring.setPixelColor( ( RPMcurrentNumLED - 1 ), 100 , 10 , 0 ); // red
                 
                 
                 // now figure out the sticky led
                 // if the current RPM LED is higher than the current sticky led position
                 // this continues in the main loop
                 if( RPMcurrentNumLED > peakHoldLedPos ){
                   
                   peakHoldLedPos = RPMcurrentNumLED;  // set the current value as the peak
                   peakHoldStartMs = millis();        // record the start time of the new peak
                   
                 }
                 
                 
                 
                  // if the sticky led has been lit for too long
                  if( millis() - peakHoldStartMs > peakHoldTime ){
                   
                      peakHoldLedPos = RPMcurrentNumLED;  // set the current value as the peak
                      peakHoldStartMs = millis();        // record the start time of the new peak
                   
                  }
                 
               
                 
                 // I also think the sticky LED should be reset if the RPM begins increasing,
                 // but not if the RPM is steady state or decreasing.
                 
                 if( RPMcurrentNumLED > RPMpreviousNumLED ){
                   
                   peakHoldLedPos = RPMcurrentNumLED;  // set the current value as the peak
                   peakHoldStartMs = millis();        // record the start time of the new peak
                   
                 }
                 
                 // and finally, set the position of the sticky LED
                 ring.setPixelColor( ( peakHoldLedPos - 1 ), 70 , 0 , 5 ); // red
                 
             
                                 
                 ring.show();  // show the new LED display
                 
                 RPMpreviousNumLED = RPMcurrentNumLED;
             
           }
           
             
           
           
 
}
//this


void loop() {
  int fuel;
  int rpm;
  int watertemp;
  int throt;
  int volt;
  float fuelHun;
  String fuelstr;

 
  // Read fuel level resistor
   int fuelLevel = analogRead(1);
  // Calculate fuel level from measured resistance values
   fuelHun = (1.00 - ((fuelLevel - 402.00) / 190.00)) * 100.00;
   fuel = (int)fuelHun;
   if (fuel > 99) {
    //show full if resistance is max value
    fuelstr = ("FULL!");
   }
   else if (fuel < 12 && fuel > 0) {
    //Show reserve if fuel level falls below reserve level
    fuelstr = ("RESERVE " + String(fuel) + "%");
   }
   else if  (fuel > 9 && fuel < 99) {
    //print resistance percentage if fuel level is between reserve and full
    fuelstr = (String(fuel) + "%");
   }
    else if  (fuel < 0) {
    //show empty if fuel resistance percentage is 0
    fuelstr = ("EMPTY");
   }
   for (int counter = 0; counter < 300; counter++) {
    //Pull ODB2 coolant temp and write to display
   
    if (counter = 100) {
    watertemp = getTemp();
    matrix2.println(watertemp);
    matrix2.writeDisplay();
    }
   
    //matrix3 ended up being controlled by a second arduino to measure speed
    // matrix3.println(counter );
    //matrix3.writeDisplay();
   
   
    lcd.home();
    lcd.print("IAT: ");
    lcd.setCursor(5, 0);
    lcd.print("           ");
    lcd.setCursor(5, 0);
   
    //Writes throttle % to LCD
    if (counter = 200) {
    throt = getIat();
    lcd.print(throt);
    }
 
    lcd.setCursor(0, 1);
    lcd.print("RPM: ");
    lcd.setCursor(6, 1);
    lcd.print("       ");
    lcd.setCursor(6, 1);
   
    //Writes rpm to displays
    rpm = getRPM();
    lcd.print(rpm);
    matrix.println(rpm);
    matrix.writeDisplay();
    engineSpeed = rpm; //Sets engine speed variable for draw ring function in memory to the odb2 rpm value
    drawRing(); //Sends the RPM value to the neopixel ring
   
   
    lcd.setCursor(0, 2);
    lcd.print("VOLTAGE: ");
    lcd.setCursor(10, 2);
    lcd.print("    ");
    lcd.setCursor(14, 2);

    //Writes voltage to LCD
    if (counter = 300) {
    volt = getVolts();
        lcd.print(volt);
    }
   
    lcd.setCursor(0, 3);
    lcd.write(byte(0));
    lcd.setCursor(1, 3);
    lcd.write(byte(1));
    lcd.setCursor(2, 3);
    lcd.print(": ");
    lcd.setCursor(5, 3);
    lcd.print("            ");
    lcd.setCursor(5, 3);
    //Writes fuel value to LCD
    lcd.print(fuelstr);

   
  }

}   

 
void ODB_init(void)
{
  //Wait for a little while before sending the reset command to the OBD-II-UART
  delay(2000);
  //Reset the OBD-II-UART
  Serial.print("ATZ\r");
  //Wait for a bit before starting to send commands after the reset.
  delay(2000);
  OBD_read();
  Serial.print("ATD\r");
  OBD_read();
  Serial.print("ATE0\r");
  OBD_read();
  Serial.flush(); 
}

int getRPM(void)
{
  //Query the OBD-II-UART for the Vehicle rpm
  //Serial.flush();
  Serial.print("010C\r");
  OBD_read();
 
  return ((strtol(&rxData[9],0,16)*256)+strtol(&rxData[12],0,16))/4;
}

int getTemp(void)
{
  //Query the OBD-II-UART for the Engine Coolant Temp
  //Serial.flush();
  Serial.print("0105\r");
  OBD_read();
  return strtol(&rxData[9], 0, 16) - 40;
}

int getIat(void)
{
  //Query the OBD-II-UART for the Engine Coolant Temp
  //Serial.flush();
  Serial.print("010F\r");
  OBD_read();
 
  return (strtol(&rxData[9],0,16)-40);
}

int getVolts(void)
{
  //Query the OBD-II-UART for the Engine Coolant Temp
  //Serial.flush();
  Serial.print("ATRV\r");
  OBD_read();
 
  return strtol(&rxData[0], 0, 16);
}

void OBD_read(void)
{
  char c;
  do{
    if(Serial.available() > 0)
    {
      c = Serial.read();
      if((c!= '>') && (c!='\r') && (c!='\n')) //Keep these out of our buffer
      {
        rxData[rxIndex++] = c; //Add whatever we receive to the buffer
      } 
     }     
  }while(c != '>'); //The ELM327 ends its response with this char so when we get it we exit out.
  rxData[rxIndex++] = '\0';//Converts the array into a string
  rxIndex=0; //Set this to 0 so next time we call the read we get a "clean buffer"
}


 




My code organization and notation are garbage and there's some other peoples shit in there I yoinked so

GO FIST YOURSELF :-*
« Last Edit: November 28, 2017, 11:56:42 PM by rawr »
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #80 on: December 02, 2017, 11:07:14 PM »

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Ntrain2k

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #81 on: December 03, 2017, 01:14:19 AM »

fap fap
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92CXyD

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #82 on: December 04, 2017, 03:01:33 PM »



Looks great, displays look bright, do they dim when headlights are on?

On the rectangle blue screen are the number easier to read than they appear, on my computer screen?

Are you going to do a step by step write up on the displays?

rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #83 on: December 04, 2017, 09:28:24 PM »

The blue lcd is pretty easy to read. I haven't added any code to dim the lights off of a headlight switch. Believe it or not they're only at about 50% brightness there.

With the ECU not attached to a  GM bcm, I'd have to add an analog pin with a voltage divider to the headlight circuit todim them and add a couple more lines of code. Wouldn't be that big of a deal. I've still got that tinted plexiglass to cut for inserts on them. I haven't had time to go down to the glass shop to have them cut it.

I might do a write up. I wouldn't be sure how balls deep to go on it though.
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Ntrain2k

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #84 on: December 04, 2017, 11:18:49 PM »

I suspect the tinted plexi will be tits and take care of the brightness issues.
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #85 on: February 16, 2018, 12:13:50 AM »



 :mexi:  O0
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ratcityrex

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #86 on: March 04, 2018, 12:38:32 AM »

Do burnouts yet?
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New setup is old bottom end with a hype r head with gsr cams. built lsv with hx35 @ 26psi on pump gas
LEED tuned! 434hp/329tq http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pbDXZxZdZs
http://www.realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/index.php/topic,16195.0.html

Old Setup B18a1 296hp/289tq LEED Tuned 20psi on pump! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Yj-Z90j4W4   
http://www.realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/index.php/topic,205.msg2437.html#msg2437

rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #87 on: March 04, 2018, 11:27:14 AM »

Do burnouts yet?

Changed my fuel pump and pre pump filter last night. Did a rolling 2nd gear burnout in the street on torque alone :D
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rawr

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #88 on: March 04, 2018, 08:17:35 PM »

https://youtu.be/PDzTDAtCC7Y

poorly running hood rippers O0
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ratcityrex

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Re: Porsche 944 ls swap
« Reply #89 on: March 05, 2018, 01:58:09 AM »

Hell yeah!!!
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New setup is old bottom end with a hype r head with gsr cams. built lsv with hx35 @ 26psi on pump gas
LEED tuned! 434hp/329tq http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pbDXZxZdZs
http://www.realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/index.php/topic,16195.0.html

Old Setup B18a1 296hp/289tq LEED Tuned 20psi on pump! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Yj-Z90j4W4   
http://www.realhomemadeturbo.com/forum/index.php/topic,205.msg2437.html#msg2437
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