KenH
Enthusiast
I have been looking at the various WB O2 sensors setups available to tune my VEC2 with. I have looked at all the ones that have been mentioned on this board and I was about to go with the LM-1 based on cost and ease of use. Recently I noticed a new system on the market and was wondering if anyone here has experience with it yet. It is called the Wide Band Commander and is made by Dynojet. Seems like the ideal setup to me.
Permanent install in the car.
Includes an AFR gauge with 10.0 to 18 range
Bosch LSU4 WB sensor
Warning light output that you can program for rich or lean conditions.
Programmable solenoid output to control NOS or similar (shut it down if you go lean for instance).
0-5ma/0-5VDC analog output for interfacing to other systems.
Monitors RPM, TPS and AFR which you can record and then plot on a PC.
Comes with all necessary sensors, cables, software. You do need to add an LED for the warning light and a switch if you want to turn the record function on/off.
Can be linked to a Dynojet dyno so you can use the same system on a dyno run rather than the less accurate tail pipe sensor.
Lists for $530 and sells for around $475 which makes it the cheapest complete solution I have found. Even beats the LM-1 by the time you add all the pieces to get the same functionality. Made by Dynojet, so you figure they should know what they are doing. Looks extremely easy to use. Now if the VEC2 would just link with the output on this box, you'd be set.
More info on their website at: http://www.widebandcommander.com/index.htm
Any obvious problems with this setup that I am overlooking?
Permanent install in the car.
Includes an AFR gauge with 10.0 to 18 range
Bosch LSU4 WB sensor
Warning light output that you can program for rich or lean conditions.
Programmable solenoid output to control NOS or similar (shut it down if you go lean for instance).
0-5ma/0-5VDC analog output for interfacing to other systems.
Monitors RPM, TPS and AFR which you can record and then plot on a PC.
Comes with all necessary sensors, cables, software. You do need to add an LED for the warning light and a switch if you want to turn the record function on/off.
Can be linked to a Dynojet dyno so you can use the same system on a dyno run rather than the less accurate tail pipe sensor.
Lists for $530 and sells for around $475 which makes it the cheapest complete solution I have found. Even beats the LM-1 by the time you add all the pieces to get the same functionality. Made by Dynojet, so you figure they should know what they are doing. Looks extremely easy to use. Now if the VEC2 would just link with the output on this box, you'd be set.
More info on their website at: http://www.widebandcommander.com/index.htm
Any obvious problems with this setup that I am overlooking?