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Thread: VVE Assistant.exe

  1. #1
    Advanced Tuner Cringer's Avatar
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    VVE Assistant.exe

    I am going to start a new thread here for the VVE tool I created. We had a good thread going (well we hi-jacked LSxpwrdZ's thread) in the Support > Editor area, and since that really wasn't the right place for it, I decided it was time to move it out and have a dedicated spot for the tool. It really belongs in both Gen 4 and Gen 5 sections though.

    I made a more complete walk-though video here (and still manage to leave out a bunch of stuff I wanted to talk about):
    https://youtu.be/_Eiyy460C_k

    The video description contains the link to download it. Just copy the EXE and DLL into the same folder and away you go!


    Note: video is uploaded but the HD processing is slow...so maybe give it a little time...
    A standard approach will give you standard results.

    My Tuning Software:

    VVE Assistant [update for v1.5]
    MAF Assistant
    EOIT Assistant

  2. #2
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    A moderator should copy the relevant parts of that thread to here if possible
    [email protected]
    Owner/GM Calibrator
    Gen V Specialist - C7 Corvette, Gen6 Camaro & CTS-V3

  3. #3
    Advanced Tuner Josue Galban's Avatar
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    perfect I'll be supporting you

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    Great tool.

    Let me give you some precious bits of information from inside of the ECM.
    1. Intake and Exhaust Cam Positions in VVE model is really CRANK referenced angles. So limiting Cam angle to 20* (just like HPT) you are restricting real Cam position to 10* which is hilarious.
    2. Gen4/Gen5 ECM internal Cam position range is 32* (or 64* CRANK).

    To get rid of steps on zone border crossing you can use 'Zone Overlapping' when calculating coefficients. The Idea is to use narrow strips of adjacent zones data (for example 5kPa/100RPM wide or just one table cell) as addition to current zone.
    I'm doing so in my own VVE tool and it gives extraordinary smooth surface.
    2011 Cadillac Escalade L94 w/LS3 valves and valve springs

  5. #5
    Advanced Tuner Cringer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by verlon View Post
    Great tool.

    Let me give you some precious bits of information from inside of the ECM.
    1. Intake and Exhaust Cam Positions in VVE model is really CRANK referenced angles. So limiting Cam angle to 20* (just like HPT) you are restricting real Cam position to 10* which is hilarious.
    2. Gen4/Gen5 ECM internal Cam position range is 32* (or 64* CRANK).

    To get rid of steps on zone border crossing you can use 'Zone Overlapping' when calculating coefficients. The Idea is to use narrow strips of adjacent zones data (for example 5kPa/100RPM wide or just one table cell) as addition to current zone.
    I'm doing so in my own VVE tool and it gives extraordinary smooth surface.
    Huh interesting about the 20 vs 32 degrees. Glad I don't have to mess with on my LS3 lol! I suppose I should allow the tool to go up to 32*...if you log the cam angle in the scanner does it show 32* when maxed out? I wonder why HPT limited it to 20*?
    A standard approach will give you standard results.

    My Tuning Software:

    VVE Assistant [update for v1.5]
    MAF Assistant
    EOIT Assistant

  6. #6
    Advanced Tuner ttz06vette's Avatar
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    So will this work with a 2 bar OS and VE instead of VVE? Obviously you would need to flip axis and still input zones.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cringer View Post
    I suppose I should allow the tool to go up to 32*
    I'd say twice, up to 64*

    Quote Originally Posted by Cringer View Post
    if you log the cam angle in the scanner does it show 32* when maxed out?
    Very likely it will. I've seen 28.5* in my L94.

    Quote Originally Posted by Cringer View Post
    I wonder why HPT limited it to 20*?
    Don't know for sure, but I know only one VVT engine with cams not exceeding 20*, it is LH2 Northstar.
    Perfaps it was the first VVT engine with Delco ECM which was reverse engineered by HPT and later used to develop VVE tool.
    2011 Cadillac Escalade L94 w/LS3 valves and valve springs

  8. #8
    Advanced Tuner Cringer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ttz06vette View Post
    So will this work with a 2 bar OS and VE instead of VVE? Obviously you would need to flip axis and still input zones.
    I haven't tested it with this config. Most likely it would need some tweaks to pull it off. I will add it to my roadmap though.
    A standard approach will give you standard results.

    My Tuning Software:

    VVE Assistant [update for v1.5]
    MAF Assistant
    EOIT Assistant

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by ttz06vette View Post
    So will this work with a 2 bar OS and VE instead of VVE? Obviously you would need to flip axis and still input zones.
    The main tool works with any table you can put into it. I often use it for averaging fuel density logs or MAF logs for best data corrections.
    2010 Vette Stock Bottom LS3 - LS2 APS Twin Turbo Kit, Trick Flow Heads and Custom Cam - 12psi - 714rwhp and 820rwtq / 100hp Nitrous Shot starting at 3000 rpms - 948rwhp and 1044rwtq still on 93
    2011 Vette Cam Only Internal Mod in stock LS3 -- YSI @ 18psi - 811rwhp on 93 / 926rwhp on E60 & 1008rwhp with a 50 shot of nitrous all through a 6L80

    ~Greg Huggins~
    Remote Tuning Available at gh[email protected]
    Mobile Tuning Available for North Georgia and WNC

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by verlon View Post
    Great tool.

    Let me give you some precious bits of information from inside of the ECM.
    1. Intake and Exhaust Cam Positions in VVE model is really CRANK referenced angles. So limiting Cam angle to 20* (just like HPT) you are restricting real Cam position to 10* which is hilarious.
    2. Gen4/Gen5 ECM internal Cam position range is 32* (or 64* CRANK).

    To get rid of steps on zone border crossing you can use 'Zone Overlapping' when calculating coefficients. The Idea is to use narrow strips of adjacent zones data (for example 5kPa/100RPM wide or just one table cell) as addition to current zone.
    I'm doing so in my own VVE tool and it gives extraordinary smooth surface.
    You can confirm that it's crank angle and not cam angle? I just thought I was having trouble getting the cam tables right because I was having to adjust the coefficients - didn't realize it was just because I was looking at it completely wrong altogether. What are you logging to show this? I've always just logged cam angle.
    2010 Vette Stock Bottom LS3 - LS2 APS Twin Turbo Kit, Trick Flow Heads and Custom Cam - 12psi - 714rwhp and 820rwtq / 100hp Nitrous Shot starting at 3000 rpms - 948rwhp and 1044rwtq still on 93
    2011 Vette Cam Only Internal Mod in stock LS3 -- YSI @ 18psi - 811rwhp on 93 / 926rwhp on E60 & 1008rwhp with a 50 shot of nitrous all through a 6L80

    ~Greg Huggins~
    Remote Tuning Available at gh[email protected]
    Mobile Tuning Available for North Georgia and WNC

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by GHuggins View Post
    You can confirm that it's crank angle and not cam angle? I just thought I was having trouble getting the cam tables right because I was having to adjust the coefficients - didn't realize it was just because I was looking at it completely wrong altogether. What are you logging to show this? I've always just logged cam angle.
    I confirm it's crank. Was having same troubles and started digging how VVE is really calculated is the OS.
    There is nothing to log to show this, but it's true.
    2011 Cadillac Escalade L94 w/LS3 valves and valve springs

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by verlon View Post
    I confirm it's crank. Was having same troubles and started digging how VVE is really calculated is the OS.
    There is nothing to log to show this, but it's true.
    Are the camshaft angles in the VVE tables always crank degrees or does it depend on the ECU? For the LFX (3.6 V6) the cams are adjusted in camshaft degrees, 0 - 25, but I believe on the LLT (previous generation V6, different ECU) the cams are adjusted in crank degrees (50 degrees of movement as opposed to 25: 7 to -43 on intake, 15 to 65 on exhaust). The VVE tables on the LFX let you choose 0 - 20 but not sure about the LLT, however.

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by verlon View Post
    I confirm it's crank. Was having same troubles and started digging how VVE is really calculated is the OS.
    There is nothing to log to show this, but it's true.
    So lets say you're adjusting fueling for a 5 degree cam angle - do you then adjust the 10 degree VVE table or rather use that positions air model for adjustment?
    2010 Vette Stock Bottom LS3 - LS2 APS Twin Turbo Kit, Trick Flow Heads and Custom Cam - 12psi - 714rwhp and 820rwtq / 100hp Nitrous Shot starting at 3000 rpms - 948rwhp and 1044rwtq still on 93
    2011 Vette Cam Only Internal Mod in stock LS3 -- YSI @ 18psi - 811rwhp on 93 / 926rwhp on E60 & 1008rwhp with a 50 shot of nitrous all through a 6L80

    ~Greg Huggins~
    Remote Tuning Available at gh[email protected]
    Mobile Tuning Available for North Georgia and WNC

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by GHuggins View Post
    So lets say you're adjusting fueling for a 5 degree cam angle - do you then adjust the 10 degree VVE table
    exactly
    2011 Cadillac Escalade L94 w/LS3 valves and valve springs

  15. #15
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    Explains why I've always felt like I was chasing my tail and not adjusting the right thing - because apparently I wasn't

    Not sure if you're interested, but perhaps you and cringer could work together to make the "ultimate" tool He's buttoning up some more enhancements on it right now, but I know your help on the VVE side could be beneficial
    2010 Vette Stock Bottom LS3 - LS2 APS Twin Turbo Kit, Trick Flow Heads and Custom Cam - 12psi - 714rwhp and 820rwtq / 100hp Nitrous Shot starting at 3000 rpms - 948rwhp and 1044rwtq still on 93
    2011 Vette Cam Only Internal Mod in stock LS3 -- YSI @ 18psi - 811rwhp on 93 / 926rwhp on E60 & 1008rwhp with a 50 shot of nitrous all through a 6L80

    ~Greg Huggins~
    Remote Tuning Available at gh[email protected]
    Mobile Tuning Available for North Georgia and WNC

  16. #16
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    Ok, we have a complication. Thanks to KillboyPowerhead I had to doublecheck for E39 and then went to E92
    E38/E67 uses crank angle in VVE
    E39/E92 uses cam angle in VVE
    Seems like tool must have a switch to select angle reference.


    Quote Originally Posted by GHuggins View Post
    Not sure if you're interested, but perhaps you and cringer could work together to make the "ultimate" tool He's buttoning up some more enhancements on it right now, but I know your help on the VVE side could be beneficial
    We can try. I'll be glad to participate.
    2011 Cadillac Escalade L94 w/LS3 valves and valve springs

  17. #17
    Hoping that's the case for the LFX (E39A ECU) or else 0 - 10 cam degrees would be pretty limiting (although the fact that the tables only go to 20 is still limiting, if you go past 20). Wonder why 20 is the limit... seems arbitrary.

    I guess to test/prove a particular ECU (and tune the VVT in general) you would dial in the whole VVE base table (with the cam(s) set to 0 degrees, since all tables use these coefficients), then adjust the cams as desired, then see how the VE Airflow (or whatever is your tuning method of choice) compares to the VVE tables for those cam degrees? So if you set the cam(s) to 10 degrees for example, then adjust the coefficients to get the 10 degree VVE table to match VE Airflow, after retesting you should see that VE Airflow matches; if not then redo for the 20 degree table and see if you get a match? Hopefully I explained that coherently...

    I also noticed in my own testing that when changing coefficients for one particular set of cam degrees (DOHC in my case) it can make another combination of cams off more than it was before (for example, you dial in intake = 9 and exhaust = 9, but now intake = 6 and exhaust = 6 is further off than before), and since changing the coefficients affects those particular zones on all tables there appears to be a compromise to make... Guess once you have the cams set the way you want then you can dial in those particular combos until the overall difference/error between all of the tables is at a minimum (and I guess you really only need to make sure under 4000 RPM is accurate since the MAF will be mostly used otherwise?).

    FYI here is the formula for DOHC engines:

    [Constant]+([MAP]*MAP)+([MAP^2]*MAP^2)+([MAP*RPM]*MAP*RPM)+([MAP_Intake]*Intake*MAP)+([MAP_Exhaust]*Exhaust*MAP)+([RPM]*RPM)+([RPM^2]*RPM^2)+([RPM_Intake]*Intake*RPM)+([RPM_Exhaust]*Exhaust*RPM)+([Intake]*Intake)+([Intake^2]*Intake^2)+([Exhaust]*Exhaust)+([Exhaust^2]*Exhaust^2)+([Intake_Exhaust]*Intake*Exhaust) = VVE cell value

    Where:
    Square brackets = value in that coefficient table
    MAP = MAP value (row axis) in VVE table
    RPM = RPM value (column axis) in VVE table
    Intake = intake cam angle selected in VVE table
    Exhaust = exhaust cam angle selected in VVE table

    Cringer posted the formula sans exhaust cam in his other thread but thought I'd post this here for anyone with a 4 or 6 cylinder. Found the formula by just throwing in numbers and seeing how the tables reacted. Easy enough to create a calculator in Excel to find the coefficients for a particular zone.

  18. #18
    Advanced Tuner Cringer's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by KillboyPowerhead View Post
    Hoping that's the case for the LFX (E39A ECU) or else 0 - 10 cam degrees would be pretty limiting (although the fact that the tables only go to 20 is still limiting, if you go past 20). Wonder why 20 is the limit... seems arbitrary.

    I guess to test/prove a particular ECU (and tune the VVT in general) you would dial in the whole VVE base table (with the cam(s) set to 0 degrees, since all tables use these coefficients), then adjust the cams as desired, then see how the VE Airflow (or whatever is your tuning method of choice) compares to the VVE tables for those cam degrees? So if you set the cam(s) to 10 degrees for example, then adjust the coefficients to get the 10 degree VVE table to match VE Airflow, after retesting you should see that VE Airflow matches; if not then redo for the 20 degree table and see if you get a match? Hopefully I explained that coherently...

    I also noticed in my own testing that when changing coefficients for one particular set of cam degrees (DOHC in my case) it can make another combination of cams off more than it was before (for example, you dial in intake = 9 and exhaust = 9, but now intake = 6 and exhaust = 6 is further off than before), and since changing the coefficients affects those particular zones on all tables there appears to be a compromise to make... Guess once you have the cams set the way you want then you can dial in those particular combos until the overall difference/error between all of the tables is at a minimum (and I guess you really only need to make sure under 4000 RPM is accurate since the MAF will be mostly used otherwise?).

    FYI here is the formula for DOHC engines:

    [Constant]+([MAP]*MAP)+([MAP^2]*MAP^2)+([MAP*RPM]*MAP*RPM)+([MAP_Intake]*Intake*MAP)+([MAP_Exhaust]*Exhaust*MAP)+([RPM]*RPM)+([RPM^2]*RPM^2)+([RPM_Intake]*Intake*RPM)+([RPM_Exhaust]*Exhaust*RPM)+([Intake]*Intake)+([Intake^2]*Intake^2)+([Exhaust]*Exhaust)+([Exhaust^2]*Exhaust^2)+([Intake_Exhaust]*Intake*Exhaust) = VVE cell value

    Where:
    Square brackets = value in that coefficient table
    MAP = MAP value (row axis) in VVE table
    RPM = RPM value (column axis) in VVE table
    Intake = intake cam angle selected in VVE table
    Exhaust = exhaust cam angle selected in VVE table

    Cringer posted the formula sans exhaust cam in his other thread but thought I'd post this here for anyone with a 4 or 6 cylinder. Found the formula by just throwing in numbers and seeing how the tables reacted. Easy enough to create a calculator in Excel to find the coefficients for a particular zone.
    Thank you! I may add the exhaust option in a future release!
    A standard approach will give you standard results.

    My Tuning Software:

    VVE Assistant [update for v1.5]
    MAF Assistant
    EOIT Assistant

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cringer View Post
    Thank you! I may add the exhaust option in a future release!
    Do it! I have DOHC and would utilize it haha

  20. #20
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    Using the VVE Assistant tool, if I have a broad range of rich and lean in the same zone what is the best way to even it all out?

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