Yes, and no. The MAF must still be in place, must remain unmodified, and all intake air must pass through it. However, in now way, shape, or form does it have to be 'functional'; you can simply tell your ECU to ignore it and use the MAP sensor. Or, since ECU wiring is effectively free, simply don't terminate the MAF wires to the ECU at all.Although the rules seem to still require the MAF to be hooked up and functioning.
Think of it this way.So - "Operational" seem to state that it has to be working/used?
Yes, and no. The MAF must still be in place, must remain unmodified, and all intake air must pass through it. However, in now way, shape, or form does it have to be 'functional'; you can simply tell your ECU to ignore it and use the MAP sensor. Or, since ECU wiring is effectively free, simply don't terminate the MAF wires to the ECU at all.
But, again, it must be there and all intake air must pass through it.
GA
Sure seems like it needs to be "operating."
It is possible to use the stock air flow meter with a system like the megasquirt, lugtronic, or other. This is what the rules look like they were written for.
Until the rules are changed - this seems to be the legal way to run a programmable system.
Leave the sucker in.... leave it plugged in.... unplug the factory ecu and run the MS or Lugtronic on it's own harness. Perfectly legal as you are allowed to add to or modify the factory harness to run your aftermarket ECU.With a clean install it is hard to tell anything has even been done in the engine compartment.Well then he is not legal to the letter ;-)
It is possible to use the stock air flow meter with a system like the megasquirt, lugtronic, or other. This is what the rules look like they were written for.
Until the rules are changed - this seems to be the legal way to run a programmable system.
"But, again, it must be there and all intake air must pass through it."
I don't agree with this statement, the rule clearly says that air intake hoses located ahead of the throttle body may be removed or substituted. Nothing says that all air must pass through the air mass meter. Even in vehicles using the air mass meter it would be legal to let extra air into the system after the air mass meter as long as it is before the throttle body.