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Chips wiv dat plees (S2 Promax chip)
- Thread starter poprock
- Start date
chrisg
Member
The car is an '89 S2, 155k miles on the clock, full service history, owned by me for the last 3 1/2 years, during which time I have done 40k miles in it. Largely standard, but with some holes cut in the airbox to improve breathing. (A mod I'm not sure I would recommend, before anyone asks.) Last time it was on a dyno (Weltmeister) it pushed the needle to 220bhp, which suggests that it's in half-decent nick. It's always run on higher-octane fuel, for reasons disussed elsewhere on here (it runs more smoothly and gives better MPG - which more than compensates for the extra cost of the fuel.)
The chip is the standard S2 chip from Promax. £100 including post and packaging (and a nice note asking that I let them know how I get on!) As with all S2's my car eats 951's for breakfast ([]), but I was intrigued by the notion of yet more power, particularly in the mid-range. The Promax chip generally gets a good write-up on this forum, so I thought I'd give it a go.
Fitting
Fitting it is a fiddle. It's actually quite difficult. Getting the ECU out is easy (passenger footwell), opening the ECU case takes a bit of brutality but isn't hard. However, for the S2 (and possibly other models), you then find there are two PCB's, one above the other, and you need to seperate them to get to the chip. Unclipping the back of the top board is a cinch, but the front is a part of the socket on the front of the assembly, and you need to flex the socket quite a lot to unplug the board (and the instructions don't make this clear). This takes more force than I was comfortable with (given you are working with PCB's), but it did come apart in the end. Removing the old chip and replacing it with the new one was very easy, and re-assembly was much easier than dismantling.
Starting
The chip is good. But it does have it's downsides, and one of them seems to be the starting. I think that the car is harder to start with the Promax chip fitted. It seems to spin for longer before catching; something I noticed immediately. I'd be interested in hearing whether this is just my impression or whether other S2 owners have found the same when fitting this chip.
Cold driving
Another downside: fuelling when cold. Particularly when coming off the throttle, when slowing down or changing gear. A close analysis of the fuelling maps would confirm this, but it feels very much as if the map in the Promax chip is rather quicker to shut off the fuel than when using the standard chip, and it makes the car very difficult to drive smoothly when cold. It's not much of a problem, but it's not just me; Mrs zcacogp noticed it immediately and commented on it. Once the car is warmed up the problem seems to go away (or it gets easier to drive around).
Hot driving
OK, I said the chip had some downsides. But it has some pretty good upsides as well. And that is the mid-range torque; I don't have any dyno plots to give figures, but it is significantly more beefy anywhere above about 1500rpm. It makes the engine feel 'bigger'; more like the 3 litres it claims to have. Everyday driving is easier as it will pull more smartly from a given speed in a high gear. Cruising 'round town is done in 4th and 5th instead of 3rd and 4th. And if you are feeling lairy, a quick change down to 2nd will break rear-end traction very readily on corners, with all the usual associated fun. [] The smoothness of the power delivery makes such irresponsible behaviour easy to explore and easy to control, but is surely only the behaviour of chavs and hooligans and therefore not the sort of thing you'd ever catch me doing!
The S2 always comes on cam at about 4k rpm, and while this characteristic isn't lost, it's not as obvious with the new chip. There is a step in power at 4k, but it's smaller. As 4k rpm in 5th equates to about 100mph, with the standard chip the car always seemed to accelerate more briskly from 100mph than from 85 or 90mph. The new chip, with a smaller step in the middle of the power band, makes high-speed cruising more relaxed; you can pootle along at 80-90mph without feeling any lack of urge on tap. This is a definite asset for motorway driving.
Of course, more mid-range also means that if you don't put your Captain Sensible underwear on, the car is quicker. And it feels quite a lot quicker - no doubt about that. From a standing start, it pulls more willingly, more enthusiastically through the rev range, and you can certainly notice that without a dyno to give you numbers. A good spank along an open road reveals a more lively power delivery, and as a result the car is more fun to drive. More power in the mid-range seems to encourage me to drive it harder (naughty!), but not into such high rev ranges. With the old chip, I would not-uncommonly clip the rev limiter when really pushing on, but the power delivery characteristics with the new chip seem to encourage me to change up a smidge earlier - as a result, I haven't found the rev limiter since it was fitted. (Re-reading that, it does occur to me that this could be because the new chip has changed - or removed - the rev limiter; can anyone confirm whether this is or isn't the case?)
So, a couple of minor downsides, and a thumping great big upside. Any other comments?
Well, yes actually. The car in question is normally aspirated, so pretty much the only changes that can be made by the ECU are to the fuelling and the ignition timing. Ignition timing is (as I understand it) largely controlled by the knock sensor, which leaves only fuelling. So, more power would expect to come at the price of lower MPG - non? Well, in the absence of enough testing to give reliable figures (I can't have done more than 500 miles since fitting a month or so ago) it seems promising. A long run from London to Shropshire and back suggested that the MPG is slightly improved on the old chip. Which, in these days of stupidly high fuel prices would be very nice.
Having said that, I serviced the car soon after fitting the chip and discovered that the plugs were very sooty. Dry, but lots of carbon. I know the car runs a smidge rich (it had high CO2 at the last MOT), but the soot on the plugs was enough to raise an eyebrow. The car had been used for a number of short journeys 'round town shortly before the service, and this would have contributed significantly to the sootyness. What I'd like to do is a find a gas tester, and see what gasses are being produced by the engine at a variety of engine speeds, once warm. Ideally, I'll do the test twice - once with the old chip and once with the new chip, and see what the differences are. I'll report back once I've done this, with some results - maybe later on this summer.
So, the chip. An improvement? Yes. Worth £100? Yes, I think so. I'd recommend it, for sure. And on that note, you'll have to excuse me; I think I have a couple of 951's caught in the air filter and need to go and clean them out ... []
Oli.
MRGT
New member
Oh, that was you I went past on Friday morning? Up near Cambridge - non? Looked like you had it jammed in reverse - hope everything is OK. I really should have stopped to help out. (Or was that just the relative difference in performance between a 951 and a mighty S2!) [][][] Oli. (No offence meant ChrisG!)ORIGINAL: chrisg I'm intrigued by your comment "it eats 951's for breakfast...." I'd be interested to see how you got on against my 951 with a Promax chip, oh and a rebuilt blue-printed engine........
morris944s2john
New member
Thanks John, No, no plans. Partially because it would gain me nothing (I don't much care how many BHP it has, although a comparison of the before and after curves would be interesting.) However the last time it was on rollers was a couple of years ago, so in order to get a meaningful 'before' and 'after' I'd need to do it again with the old chip and then with the new one, on the same rollers, within half an hour or so of each other. All of which would be time-consuming and expensive. If someone else wanted to pay for it for research purposes then I'd happily allow my car to be used tho'. Oli.ORIGINAL: morris944s2john Do you have any plans to put the car back on the dyno post chip fitting??
pauljmcnulty
Active member
Indeed, great effort. I don't like the idea of dynoing as part of discussing a chip, personally. Promax always insist that theirs isn't meant to be a chip that raises power, but that it smooths out power and torque making the car more driveable. I suspect that the purely academic figures achieved on a dyno wouldn't have much relevance. In fact, I think it could even be detrimental. Suppose chip A produces an extra 5BHP, there will soon be someone who markets a chip B with 10BHP, regardless of the other, more useful, benefits like smooth power and reliability. Headline figures do sell, witness the current trend for cars that have to beat rival's times around the 'Ring, leading to setups that are compromised on UK roads.Thanks for the good write up! Do you have any plans to put the car back on the dyno post chip fitting??
MRGT
New member
pauljmcnulty
Active member
Get yourself an S2, then! [][] Good point about the torque spread being shown on a dyno graph though, it'll be very interesting to see.Given that the 'S' doesnt achive max BHP until 6000RPM I would happily see a lower max BHP at that figure if it provided more a better bhp/torque curve lower down the range
MRGT
New member
And suffer from rusty sills ? I dont think so [] In all honesty for the budget I set aside 18months ago for a 944, S2's were out of reach, if I was buying now with the same budget they would be within budget, such have prices dropped. []ORIGINAL: pauljmcnulty Get yourself an S2, then! [][]
pauljmcnulty
Active member
It is sobering. My S2 cost less than my Lux, five years earlier. I thought a Lux, in good nick, wouldn't drop far below the £4K mark over time, yet I still say the same thing about my S2! [&:]In all honesty for the budget I set aside 18months ago for a 944, S2's were out of reach, if I was buying now with the same budget they would be within budget, such have prices dropped.
Diver944
Active member
Copperman05
New member
It isn't night and day in terms of outright power, but 'subtle' is underplaying it. The difference in mid-range drivability is significant. It's £100 well spent in my book. Oli.ORIGINAL: evoboy69 Very interesting to hear your findings but the difference sounds a little too subtle to me…
Copperman05
New member
The differences may sound sutble but you need to look at is like this, if the stock chip produced say 100ftlb torque at a given rev range and the promax chip gives 120ftlb at the same revs then thats a 20% increase in torque over the stock chip (I think), yes at peak power the effect is subtle as the increase is clouded by the overall output at that rev range, but in the mid range and even the lower midrange the difference is noticable as the difference is more marked compared to the standard chip. If that makes sense? EddORIGINAL: evoboy69 Very interesting to hear your findings but the difference sounds a little too subtle to me…
Hilux
New member
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