Tristan_ACT wrote:Lokiel wrote:Getting cold+warm starts dialed-in nicely actually requires cold and warm environments as a starting point.
In summer, unless the car's in a refrigerated environment, the weather's not cold enough to tune the car for cold starts. Many tuners require the car for a few days during winter so that they can get a few cracks at a true cold-start environment - once the car is warmed up it needs to cool down again to test the cold-start tuning so there's really only a couple of opportunities to do that between 0700 and 1100, after that the weather's generally not cold enough to test cold starts.
So if you do get your ECU tuned in summer and live in a cold winter environment, it's quite normal that it will probably need some additional tuning 6 months later when it's winter to improve your cold starts.
Argh right, so it's not like redoing all the maps, probably just the cold starts. I know I'm being pedantic now, however would it be best to get it initially tuned in winter or going into winter. Then they could get the cold starts right in the morning/night and do the warm starts during the day?
Cold starts are the trickiest part so yes, winter is the best time to install it. After the initial tune, most tuners get you to drive your car for a week or two and then bring it back for additional tweaks based on your feedback - this re-tune/tweak is usually covered by your installation cost (ie. shouldn't cost you anything extra).