• Hi everyone,

    As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.

    When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.

    Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

    Unfortunately, the new software version doesn’t support importing the old site’s styles, so for now, you’ll see the XenForo default style. This may change over time.

    Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.

    Thanks for your patience and support!

My EJK chronicle

Hey V8astro - Are you still happy with your EJK? Mine was good for the first couple hundred miles, but I'm at about 600 miles now and it is very sluggish right off idle again. It almost died on me this morning in first gear. :(
 
Hey V8astro - Are you still happy with your EJK? Mine was good for the first couple hundred miles, but I'm at about 600 miles now and it is very sluggish right off idle again. It almost died on me this morning in first gear. :(
Did you unplug the O2?
 
I received a call from Dillon Friday and we had a very good chat, what a great company.

A couple of very interesting things were discovered.

There was talk about the EJK having an issue on throttle roll off and how they were reflashing reprogramming the ecu. I gave them a call a couple weeks ago to see if my Lexx could be flashed the same. As some of you know, they were out of the office busy.

So I get the call, and we determined that I had a gen 3, and when the tech gets back he will check the numbers to see if the boards are the same.

In the discussion, I find out that the Gen 3.5 has the ability to reduce fuel below the default map levels. The gen 3 is only capable of adding fuel. The Terra uses a Gen 3. The gen 3.5 will probably not be available for the Terra.

We were talking and I mentioned the fellow from 14point7 and his o2 data logger and him thinking of making a unit that works with fuel.

This is where I get excited. Dobeck is developing a closed loop fueler. The primary focus is for the UTV but Dillon said it would most likely cross into the bikes as well. I didn't get into specifics on how to adjust it or if it would use mapping or just the zone programming of the EJK.

This seems like it would be a cheaper version "load based" PC5. Get this, the current owner of Dobeck is the guy who started Dynojet. He sold out to the current owners, and is currently working on a new dyno that simulates real time driving conditions, to include driving scenery etc, for a simulated drive.

Back to the EJK and Terra. I was talking to him about my Lexx that is for a Raptor 700 and he asked how I plugged it in. I told him I just bought adapters, and that was going to work out well for me as I planned on putting a switch in the pigtails to turn the ejk off and initiate the O2. That way I could keep my stock mapping and closed loop for the majority of my driving, and when I wanted FUN...flip the switch.

This is the most important takeaway from the entire conversation (for me).... The EJK 3 can be turned off just by putting a switch in the ground wire. The 3.5 has to be removed from the system or it could wreck circuits. We have the Version 3 from what Dillon says. And that also is my Lexx. So even if my Lexx does not decrease fuel, it at least can be turned off.

You can tell by looking at the back, there should be a rubber plug squarish about a half inch big. That is the version 3. That's were they plug it into their computer to flash it etc.

I got the paperwork to become a distributer. I may apply. They also sell CVT belts by Gates.
 
I received a call from Dillon Friday and we had a very good chat, what a great company.

A couple of very interesting things were discovered.

Dobeck is developing a closed loop fueler. The primary focus is for the UTV but Dillon said it would most likely cross into the bikes as well. I didn't get into specifics on how to adjust it or if it would use mapping or just the zone programming of the EJK.

This seems like it would be a cheaper version "load based" PC5. Get this, the current owner of Dobeck is the guy who started Dynojet. He sold out to the current owners, and is currently working on a new dyno that simulates real time driving conditions, to include driving scenery etc, for a simulated drive.

That is some interesting info.

I think there's a lot of room for developing better dyno that match the real world driving conditions much closer. I'm not impressed with the current spinning drum designs, I think they are very limited in scope.

I think you could do one using electromagnetic resistance that could easily simulate varying riding conditions, resistance that matched the bike/rider mass, and even program in wind resistance factors.

What's important is being able to simulate slow speed riding for fine tuning throttle response, plus accurately simulate freeway cruise mode. The current spinning drum doesn't take into account wind resistance and I've found it loads the bike more than in reality. I judged this by the throttle angle required to achieve the same "speeds" on the dyno vs real freeway riding.
 
I just sent an email to Dobeck letting them know how the controller they sent me is working. I'm still running the controller they way they sent it and the bike is running great. All of the stalling and stumbling issues are gone. I can cold fire the bike and ride away without issue. The 3000 - 3500 rpm stumble is gone. There is power on hand whenever I twist the throttle. The bike pulls like a freight train even if you grab a hand full at 80 mph and just keeps pulling. Before I got the controller I was averaging 63 mpg to and from work. That has dropped to 60 mpg. The only issue to report was if I go into hard acceleration then back off the throttle partially the bike will start to stumble until I take the throttle back to zero for a few seconds then throttle back up to cruising speed. I'll see what they say.


Any progress on this issue? I've got my EJK ready to send in and get re-flashed, but want to make sure the kinks are ironed out first.
 
Well, I got one a month ago Nick. Although it really improved the running it still didn't fully get rid of the off idle stumble. I've called them numerous times and have tweaked the adjustments but it's still there. My TR has to be about the most stubborn one out there though and I expect their product will probably do the trick for you.
 
That is some interesting info.

I think there's a lot of room for developing better dyno that match the real world driving conditions much closer. I'm not impressed with the current spinning drum designs, I think they are very limited in scope.

I think you could do one using electromagnetic resistance that could easily simulate varying riding conditions, resistance that matched the bike/rider mass, and even program in wind resistance factors.

What's important is being able to simulate slow speed riding for fine tuning throttle response, plus accurately simulate freeway cruise mode. The current spinning drum doesn't take into account wind resistance and I've found it loads the bike more than in reality. I judged this by the throttle angle required to achieve the same "speeds" on the dyno vs real freeway riding.

Dan, You are so right about this. After comparing on-the-road riding AFRs with those very high AFRs at the start of every inertial dyno run; and after realizing that the average dyno "pull" exercises only about a half dozen fuel map locations out of several hundred total, I decided to dissect an R1200GS Dyno test by comparing GS-911 data with the Dyno information.

It's a long read but the 7 part report starts here: http://www.advrider.com/forums/showthread.php?p=23436774&highlight=Dyno#post23436774.

The conclusion is similar to yours, you need actual rear-wheel resistance at the start, and need tests at many throttle openings. The best tests are on engine dynos with constant load and RPM.
 
Any progress on this issue? I've got my EJK ready to send in and get re-flashed, but want to make sure the kinks are ironed out first.

I am still trying to get it ironed out. It has gotten much better. I have been adjusting settings and working out the issues but, I have been out of contact with Dobeck for a few weeks on it as I have been slammed at work. Some of you may have seen the huge fire that happened in Downtown Los Angeles on the news a few weeks back. That was my job site so I have been pretty busy since.
 
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