Customizing the DBW Throttle mapping
In case you don't already know, you can remove the cover from the throttle PEDAL angle sensor, which is near the brake master cylinder, and manually change the pedal angle reading from the engine compartment. If the car is turned on (engine off), and the intake tube is disconnected from the throttle body, you should be able to watch the throttle plate open and close in relation to the pedal angle.
I give you a lot of credit... the flashpro has so many nuances and quirks to work around and hondata doesn't often give clear answers as to what the heck is going on. I don't have all day to make little changes to a map, drive around in circles, look at datalogs, change some settings.. rinse, repeat, over and over. It'd be nice if they could explain what was happening..
So I was able to get back to 100% tplate, and it's hard to tell from the butt dyno, but I'd swear there's a difference between 100% and 75% tplate%, at least audibly with the 3.5" intake.
I reflashed the car with a stock throttle map and I'm back to hitting 100% on the tplate %, so that's good in that it seems limited to the table somehow. Definitely annoying as it's not working as expected, but at least I know there isn't a bug/problem somewhere that I'm overlooking.
The question then becomes what exactly is causing the tplate % to not hit 100% in the "offending" throttle map. I'm going to guess it has to do with the 50-75% range of my map somehow limiting the throttle to not get to 100%. Hopefully increasing these values somewhat will help. Scaling down most of the map 25% I find provides for better partial throttle response and street driving and I really liked it, but I'll have to figure out where the problem is and go from there.
I'm pestering hondata in hopes that they'll shed some more light on the oem throttle code behind the scenes, but I won't hold my breath. I'll have to tinker with the throttle map to see what's causing the issue. I'm going to try and scale up the 50-75% tpedal parts in the map below and cross my fingers. If anyone has any info/input it'd be greatly appreciated.
[attachment=93828:tmap.jpg]
I reflashed the car with a stock throttle map and I'm back to hitting 100% on the tplate %, so that's good in that it seems limited to the table somehow. Definitely annoying as it's not working as expected, but at least I know there isn't a bug/problem somewhere that I'm overlooking.
The question then becomes what exactly is causing the tplate % to not hit 100% in the "offending" throttle map. I'm going to guess it has to do with the 50-75% range of my map somehow limiting the throttle to not get to 100%. Hopefully increasing these values somewhat will help. Scaling down most of the map 25% I find provides for better partial throttle response and street driving and I really liked it, but I'll have to figure out where the problem is and go from there.
I'm pestering hondata in hopes that they'll shed some more light on the oem throttle code behind the scenes, but I won't hold my breath. I'll have to tinker with the throttle map to see what's causing the issue. I'm going to try and scale up the 50-75% tpedal parts in the map below and cross my fingers. If anyone has any info/input it'd be greatly appreciated.
[attachment=93828:tmap.jpg]
I think your issue may be due to the values in the 66.7% column, since I don't think the colomns above 66.7% even work. I believe all the values are deflated by 1/3 on the screen, so 66.7% is really 100%. If you enter 50% in column 66.7, then your max TPLATE would be about 75%.
I think your issue may be due to the values in the 66.7% column, since I don't think the colomns above 66.7% even work. I believe all the values are deflated by 1/3 on the screen, so 66.7% is really 100%. If you enter 50% in column 66.7, then your max TPLATE would be about 75%.


So I reflashed the car and drove home and your assessment definitely looks spot on gernby! I had a max tp % of 86% which is 1.5x the value of 56.7. Have you mentioned this to Hondata? It certainly looks like a bug to me (as a lot of resolution for the map is lost), but who knows maybe something's screwy on honda's end..? I will play around with the throttle table some more but your finding that the table effectively just uses a multiplier is very strange but interesting. Who knows what else is going on besides the multiplier..
[attachment=93873:throttle86.jpg]
[attachment=93874:throttle862.jpg]
[attachment=93873:throttle86.jpg]
[attachment=93874:throttle862.jpg]
Interesting response from Hondata:
https://www.hondata.com/forum/viewto...p=86817#p86817
So one good interesting piece of info in all this is that hondata will expose the throttle/speed table which acts as a lookup to the actual throttle table. If you look at the table at higher speeds you lose a lot of resolution. Hopefully if we remove the slope and make this lookup table linear it'll result in better on track throttle resolution.
Another note is the second table is completely different than mine..? The table they posted matches what you said gernby regarding the roughly 1.5x multiplier, but strange how it's listed incorrectly in flashpro if that's the case. Maybe the display values are simply incorrect and they need to fix that..?
https://www.hondata.com/forum/viewto...p=86817#p86817
So one good interesting piece of info in all this is that hondata will expose the throttle/speed table which acts as a lookup to the actual throttle table. If you look at the table at higher speeds you lose a lot of resolution. Hopefully if we remove the slope and make this lookup table linear it'll result in better on track throttle resolution.
Another note is the second table is completely different than mine..? The table they posted matches what you said gernby regarding the roughly 1.5x multiplier, but strange how it's listed incorrectly in flashpro if that's the case. Maybe the display values are simply incorrect and they need to fix that..?
Interesting response from Hondata:
https://www.hondata.com/forum/viewto...p=86817#p86817
So one good interesting piece of info in all this is that hondata will expose the throttle/speed table which acts as a lookup to the actual throttle table. If you look at the table at higher speeds you lose a lot of resolution. Hopefully if we remove the slope and make this lookup table linear it'll result in better on track throttle resolution.
Another note is the second table is completely different than mine..? The table they posted matches what you said gernby regarding the roughly 1.5x multiplier, but strange how it's listed incorrectly in flashpro if that's the case. Maybe the display values are simply incorrect and they need to fix that..?
https://www.hondata.com/forum/viewto...p=86817#p86817
So one good interesting piece of info in all this is that hondata will expose the throttle/speed table which acts as a lookup to the actual throttle table. If you look at the table at higher speeds you lose a lot of resolution. Hopefully if we remove the slope and make this lookup table linear it'll result in better on track throttle resolution.
Another note is the second table is completely different than mine..? The table they posted matches what you said gernby regarding the roughly 1.5x multiplier, but strange how it's listed incorrectly in flashpro if that's the case. Maybe the display values are simply incorrect and they need to fix that..?

Also.. I think they botched the labeled column header reflecting the throttle % in the throttle table (as Gernby has noted) and I've observed. They didn't exactly address this in their response but it's water under the bridge and if it gets fixed that's all I care about.
Thank you for staying on top of this with them. I think we need to form a union because that's the only way they seem to listen, lol.
I remember reading old old posts from Gernby harping about this stuff and at that time it was understood that there is another function affecting the main throttle table as shown by his empirical 1.5x multiplier evidence. But I guess supporting existing customers isn't as profitable as adding to your portfolio for potential new customers, lol.
I remember reading old old posts from Gernby harping about this stuff and at that time it was understood that there is another function affecting the main throttle table as shown by his empirical 1.5x multiplier evidence. But I guess supporting existing customers isn't as profitable as adding to your portfolio for potential new customers, lol.






