hardingfv32 wrote:gato azul wrote:How do you know, that they can be done with a mechanical linkage, if you don't even know what it is/ have ever seen one?
I have asked on many occasions what a 'driver torque demand map' is and how it differs form a 'throttle map' that we often speak of. You will find the term 'accelerator pedal shaping map' also used in the rules. Can not say I have found 'throttle map' used.
We are clearly not all on the same page when using these terms.
The Honda mechanical throttle system system was a cam following system. The slot the cam travelled in looked similar to the black line in the graph we have been discussing. With the turbo it was all about adding better 'feel' in that zone when the turbo really kicks in.
Brian
And that is exactly the point while this discussion and others "snowball" in terms of pages, because without a understanding of how a "torque controller" works, and what the relationship between throttle position (at the engine) to torque produced by the engine is, we will go nowhere fast.
So before we (you) spend another 20 pages arguing around in circles and in parallel about different terminology, it may helps to define some things beforehand, so that everyone is on the same page, and uses the same terms to describe the same things. If we can agree on some terms, we may go somewhere with this discussion.
Throttle map or accelerator pedal shaping map refers to the relationship of throttle pedal position, set by the driver, and the position of the throttle bodies, (butterflies whatever) at the engine - IMHO
but it is important to know/understand that throttle position at the engine does not equal torque demand nor does it equal torque produced by the engine.
As for the Honda system, yes it's possible, other systems (perhaps more common) us a so called "quadrant" (mainly used with throttle cables) to define the relation of "throttle pedal position" to "throttle at the engine position".