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Everything about CB Performance Black Box
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daos
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PostPosted: Sat Sep 07, 2024 1:13 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

why not just call CB and get your info from the horse’s mouth. they don’t bite.
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Rob Combs
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PostPosted: Wed Sep 25, 2024 9:32 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

One thing that I noticed early on but did not fully consider with the Black Box is the potential for MAP sensor skew.

Mine sits at 93 kpa at atmospheric pressure, sitting on my desk on a power supply. Never gave it much thought, but the other day while I was reconfiguring my timing table to take advantage of lower manifold pressures I'm seeing (BB software packages seem to bottom out around 60 kpa; I'm idling at ~35 indicated, it finally dawned on me to check the local atmospheric pressure, convert that reading to kpa, and compare. My sensor appears to be skewed 8 kpa low, at least at ambient pressure. This might just be normal tolerances in the MAP sensors themselves, and to me it's not worth fixating or chasing down a root cause since I can program around it.

If my logic is not failing me, and I assume the sensor skew is constant (it might not be), this means transitions need to happen a little earlier because actual pressure is a bit higher than indicated pressure. It won't matter as much just off idle and at low pressures because the engine will probably tolerate more error in that range as long as you're not running it on the bleeding edge. But it might matter at the higher/full-load pressures when the engine isn't quite as tolerant to too much advance.

For this reason I programmed mine to start phasing out vacuum advance a little earlier, closer to 70 kpa to compensate for the sensor skew.

You all might already know this, and I might be slow on the uptake, but another handy thing available to anyone with Excel is to duplicate your timing table (yes, it's time consuming). You can then "heat map" your table to give colors to cell values so you can easily see any outlier cells that don't make sense, or to see stark changes in timing between adjacent cells and determine if those stark changes make sense or might cause problems. I find this super convenient when changing values, as you can also copy your table before you make changes, and create a separate "delta" table to map the differences before to after using very simple formulas, and heat map those changes to see if you've done anything truly drastic and if it still makes sense. This really highlights your changes in an easy to interpret way.

This beats the hell out of trying to focus on 441 cells in a tiny table in a small window on your laptop. You can also create a 3D chart of your table, complete with heat mapping, if you so desire.

Just a few tips for those who find the graphical approach more intuitive to interpret.

Hope these observations help someone along the way...
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piledriver
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PostPosted: Mon Dec 02, 2024 8:26 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

Microsquirt and a VW 4 post coil, GM 3 bar external map sensor. Fully programmable ignition , add you can add
injectors if desired. Main unit is ~$350 with a 1M harness, it can mount on the fan housing or firewall, all components automotive rated.
VW 4 tower coils are available anywhere.(you want the one with the aluminum heat sink/ignitor module built in)

The Tunerstudio and megalogvier software is quite excellent and free to use with a couple missing features, for ignition only you wont miss the autotune (fuel only, with a wideband) The logging software will allow you to offline tune mased on logged data.(given a wideband O2)

There are many trigger setups out there, or you can roll your own.

I run a $6 steel toothed wheel on some 3/8" brass tubing... inside a mostly gutted 009 can and a $8 sensor module I made myself from an ATS667 from Digikey. The wheel has a tiny bit of weld for a missing tooth. (the sensor doesnt like a missing tooth but with one filled in works past 15K, 36 tooth wheel)

The best distributor is no distributor but one that's just there to run the toothed wheel is pretty reliable.

I have run MS2 or MS3 for about 15 years now, >10 years with this setup, the car is a daily and I have a ~50 mile commute each way.

I have also run a VR sensor aimed at the flywheel, but that requires a flywheel with no extra holes in the disk vent hole or plate bolt hole radii. (a hole is the same as a tooth to vr and most hall sensors)
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jimmyhoffa
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 1:06 pm    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

Speaking of enhancing the topic at hand which none of the last 6 posts did in the slightest, here is the IGBT in the Black Box responsible for coil driving. It is automotive-specific in ways that fit the bill perfectly and CB uses the genuine ST Micro brand one instead of some knock-off copy.
Image may have been reduced in size. Click image to view fullscreen.

Look up the .PDF datasheet for the ST Microelectronics GP18N40LZ and you'll find what current it is capable of reliably sinking, and you can use that to ensure what the Ohm coil you'd be able to run if you desire a specific one. I know the manual tells you when you buy a BB, but maybe you want to push it. Very Happy That IGBT in the picture has the job of grounding the negative side of the coil to charge it for the dwell decided by the CB Black Box brains, and then releasing that connection to ground to fire the coil.

Nothing revolutionary but nice to see well-specified genuine components. I was rooting around in there trying to figure out why my BB is chronically unreliable and hypersensitive to mag pickup spacing, but I think I'm done here and I'll run my Daytona TCS-1 with a Ford TFI or my "Dumb" MSD box.
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oprn
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PostPosted: Wed Dec 04, 2024 3:43 pm    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

Looks like our aviation friend gave up and went away. If he is running an automotive engine he is also operating in the Experimental class. As such there are no certification requirements for either the engine or the systems attached it therefore there is no liability attached to advice given him. It's his butt in the seat, his funeral if it goes left.

An aircraft engine is for all practical purposes a STATIONARY engine. It will not likely be operating below 75% of full throttle except for taxiing on the ground. As such I am not convinced there is any advantage to having a vacuum input for part throttle advance. It will never be running at a load where it would be an advantage except on the ground.

Historically certified aircraft engines didn't even have a mechanical advance.

I think our aviation friend is way overthinking this.
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58 Plastic Tub
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 7:42 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

I have a couple of Black Boxes modified to drive twin-spark. It seemed to be the easiest and best way to light two fires at exactly the same time when I was putting together a twin-spark 2276 about a decade ago. Mario Velotta added a second coil driver to a pair of BBs (one was a spare) and I used a single comp-u-fire pickup and a Datsun twin-plug cap and rotor in a modified and locked out 009. It was the shizzle, and looked the part with a bundle o' snakes distributor cap front and center.

It was also a complicated Rube Goldberg arrangement that eventually let me down, when 1000 mi. from home, the comp-u-fire module loosened up and started shaking around and giving me horrible spark scatter. Until then, it had performed amazingly well. In the end, the entire thing was brought down by the complexity of the entire conceit.

The failure had nothing to do with the BB or its modifications, which is my point in posting. This thread was already going when I decided to use the BB for spark control, and when there was the (unfounded, as it turned out) concerns about firing while cranking, etc. The electronics of the thing performed flawlessly in a pretty hostile environment for the entirety of the time I ran it (3 years, if memory serves).

It uses manifold vacuum instead of a TPS for load calculations. I'd rather it used a TPS, and I'm sure there's probably a way to get it done, but the vacuum signal at least worked, which is more than I was ever able to say about an 034 (or Unilite) vacuum canister advance.

The rest of this nonsense is just a pissing match over grudges from another time and place, or guys who feel the need to record every random thought they have as it occurs to them.

I've lurked here for a long time, and posted sparingly. I appreciate the contributions of guys who forget more before they get out of bed in the morning than I'll ever know in my life -- but a ton of space is used in nonproductive ways by a few guys bent on having their say on every conceivable topic.

This one is about the Black Box. It's a zillion pages long, and probably never going to be read its entirety by anybody. You're shouting into the void, gentlemen.
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jimmyhoffa
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 9:55 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

58 Plastic Tub wrote:
I have a couple of Black Boxes modified to drive twin-spark. It seemed to be the easiest and best way to light two fires at exactly the same time when I was putting together a twin-spark 2276 about a decade ago. Mario Velotta added a second coil driver to a pair of BBs (one was a spare) and I used a single comp-u-fire pickup and a Datsun twin-plug cap and rotor in a modified and locked out 009. It was the shizzle, and looked the part with a bundle o' snakes distributor cap front and center.


I think this could be done cleanly and covertly within the box and appear as if almost nothing had been done, while being just as reliable as it is for most people in the first place. If you bought another driver IGBT and tapped another hole, you could mount it inside the box. Then, wire the sinking pin to the same ground pad as the other, and the trigger pin to the same pin as the original IGBT coil driver. There is an extra unused pin socket on the white plug, and you could wire the coil output to that and it would be SUPER clean and almost an invisible mod to drive two coils.

Is that how you / Mario did it? (Stock pics below for reference)
Image may have been reduced in size. Click image to view fullscreen.

Image may have been reduced in size. Click image to view fullscreen.

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58 Plastic Tub
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 11:21 am    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

I’m not sure what Mario used or did, Jim, but it worked great.

It took him a while to figure it out — but once he did, it was reported to be not overly complicated. I do know the first one was a bit expensive (because of the research involved), but the second one was very inexpensive to have done.

Both of them are sitting in my stash, likely to never be used again. The entire project was straight up to see if I could do it, and to provide a diversion from the pressure of running a business. The project failed in the end (by not producing the desired result) — but it was a success, insomuch as I learned a ton and was amused and occupied mentally in the process.

It really was stupid-cool… but in the end, mostly just stupid.
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Dauz
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PostPosted: Thu Dec 05, 2024 12:55 pm    Post subject: Re: Everything about CB Performance Black Box Reply with quote

I've had the same technology in CBs "digital" distributor. Although I had wound up leveraging one of the default tunes, the timing table was easy to work with. MAP input worked perfect. Disabling the mechanical advance was a breeze.
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