Has anyone experimented with chip tuning a td6?
#21
#22
It's interesting that Chip Express is nearly half the cost of Velocity. Granted, it's a piggyback system, but still.....
Also, I had an interesting conversation with my service advisor on Friday. I was asking how they felt about tunes on warrantied vehicles. He said they didn't have a problem with it as long as I told them the tune was on it. He said if they don't know the tune is there and they hook up their diagnostic tools and run the program, it screws up all kinds of software. If they're aware the tune is present, they'll either work around it or, better yet, have me remove it prior to service.
Also, I had an interesting conversation with my service advisor on Friday. I was asking how they felt about tunes on warrantied vehicles. He said they didn't have a problem with it as long as I told them the tune was on it. He said if they don't know the tune is there and they hook up their diagnostic tools and run the program, it screws up all kinds of software. If they're aware the tune is present, they'll either work around it or, better yet, have me remove it prior to service.
#23
It's interesting that Chip Express is nearly half the cost of Velocity. Granted, it's a piggyback system, but still.....
Also, I had an interesting conversation with my service advisor on Friday. I was asking how they felt about tunes on warrantied vehicles. He said they didn't have a problem with it as long as I told them the tune was on it. He said if they don't know the tune is there and they hook up their diagnostic tools and run the program, it screws up all kinds of software. If they're aware the tune is present, they'll either work around it or, better yet, have me remove it prior to service.
Also, I had an interesting conversation with my service advisor on Friday. I was asking how they felt about tunes on warrantied vehicles. He said they didn't have a problem with it as long as I told them the tune was on it. He said if they don't know the tune is there and they hook up their diagnostic tools and run the program, it screws up all kinds of software. If they're aware the tune is present, they'll either work around it or, better yet, have me remove it prior to service.
#24
I spoke with one tuner company and they can do magic like unlocking paid software only features, enabling Dynamic drive, steering assist adaptive cruise control, SVx panel and all other great stuff but
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
#25
I spoke with one tuner company and they can do magic like unlocking paid software only features, enabling Dynamic drive, steering assist adaptive cruise control, SVx panel and all other great stuff but
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
#26
#27
In the Jeep Grand Cherokee EcoDiesel, there was a company called Green Diesel Engineering and they seemingly had a way to make the tune look like the latest s/w version at the time. Some who didn't like removing their ECU used a second ECU as an option, but it cost a little extra to get a new black ECU programmed to your specific vehicle. GDE doesn't have a way to swap tunes via OBD and so that requires a bench flash. Removing an ECU in a Jeep Grand Cherokee wasn't too bad, but I'm not sure where it is in the Discovery.
If a dealer wanted to, they can try and look at the checksums and see that the ECU was flashed, even if it was tuned back to the stock tune. The best way is a hand-held tuner that permitted you to swap tunes yourself. If the dealer had an update they could update your ECU, overwriting any tune you may have had on there, and then you could d/l that updated ECU s/w version and send it back to your tuner to have the tune re-applied. Short of that, yeah, a tune in today's day in age of ECU flash tuning via OBDII, it's probably not worth it.
If a dealer wanted to, they can try and look at the checksums and see that the ECU was flashed, even if it was tuned back to the stock tune. The best way is a hand-held tuner that permitted you to swap tunes yourself. If the dealer had an update they could update your ECU, overwriting any tune you may have had on there, and then you could d/l that updated ECU s/w version and send it back to your tuner to have the tune re-applied. Short of that, yeah, a tune in today's day in age of ECU flash tuning via OBDII, it's probably not worth it.
#28
Got my BlueSpark kit last week, customer service is great, shipping toll few days, installed in 10 min. Works great. There is no change under 1800RPM as you can't fool the physics of turbo engine. But above 1800 it jumps out and rocks even on medium - default map preset. Highly recommend.
#29
Got my BlueSpark kit last week, customer service is great, shipping toll few days, installed in 10 min. Works great. There is no change under 1800RPM as you can't fool the physics of turbo engine. But above 1800 it jumps out and rocks even on medium - default map preset. Highly recommend.
#30
I spoke with one tuner company and they can do magic like unlocking paid software only features, enabling Dynamic drive, steering assist adaptive cruise control, SVx panel and all other great stuff but
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
To flash ECU you need DoIP VCI kit (500$ clone - 1500$ original) laptop and they can do it over TeamViewer session and dealer will see that the version of ECU firmware have different flags (however there is no log) and there is NO WAY to revert back to stock and set exactly same flags in ECU. So if you will have issues with engine or some other reason to force you to pay for costly repair, your dealer will find this info in ECU and use it against you. You were messing with ECU and will expect them to pay for fixing related or not problems ? Why should they?
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Alex_M
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10-13-2018 11:16 AM