alan_edward 0 Posted April 20, 2005 Took the car to G-Werks. The car runs well now, with a defenite increase in power. However, Can the MFA give wrong information? For example: On the way, I filled her up in shell drove all the way to london, did about 98 miles and filled her up. Only had to put £10.88 which means it gave around 37 mpg. But the MFA was in 23mpg slowly increasing to 25.7 , but thats towards the end of the journey. Cannot figure out why.. Anyone had the same problem? Cheers Alan Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bcstudent 0 Posted April 20, 2005 The MFA, I believe, calculates fuel economy based on the inlet manifold vacuum, which obviously changes with throttle position. It is really only a gimmick and should only be used as a guide. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Roger Blassberg 0 Posted April 20, 2005 The MFA calculates mpg on the basis of inlet manifold pressure; a low pressure, sometimes called "manifold depression", corresponds to a closed or nearly closed throttle, a higher (close to full atmospheric) pressure when the throttle is open more widely. It does it by means of a small-bore tube attached, at one end to the inlet manifold downstream of the throttle and, at the other, to a diaphragm transducer somewhere behind the dash. This gives a signal on a continuous basis to the processor in the MFA which integrates it over time into mpg figures. If there is a leak in that pipe or its connections, the manifold pressure appears to be more than it actually is and the processor will interpret that as a more open throttle position. So, it thinks that more fuel is being used. Clearly it is a rough-and -ready method, but sudden changes or obvious discrepancy can be caused by a leak in the connection, or by a faulty transducer. By the way, your test over 98 miles was nowhere near long enough to give a representative result; just a strong following wind can distort figures upwards over such a short distance. It would be better to do it over 2 or 3 tankfuls to get a more accurate indication. Hope this helps. Best wishes RB Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites