A couple of years ago I wanted to put the Eaton m45 mini cooper S supercharger on my m40... Never really got around to it but now the project is happening though the car has changed to my current iS.
Obviously I needed standalone system for the supercharger but it was something I wanted to do anyway - supercharger or not - just for the experience and "fun"
I reckon there's three routes to take with megasquirt:
1. Buy a ready made kit and have somebody like Ant fit and map it.
2. Buy a ready made kit and fit/map yourself.
3. Buy an un-built kit and build, fit and map yourself.
I'm a tinkerer by nature so the ONLY route for me was the self-build kit. I've got a bit of an electronics background but don't really know much about cars, but want to learn so MS helps with that side a lot! If you want to really learn about engines, ignition timings, fuel injection systems and all that goodness then a self-built/installed and mapped MS is definitely the way forward.
For me the costs were as follows:
MS Kit: 170
Wide-band: 170
Air temp sensor: 20
Stim(recommended to help build the kit, can be sold): 40
Centre exhaust with bung for wide-band o2: 20 (cheers Dan!)
Wire for hooking in: 10
USB to serial adapter for laptop: 15
Old broken ECU for the loom connector: free, complements of a blown ignition driver
Piping for MAP sensor: free, thanks to daddy
Stuff I already had: Multimeter/scope, soldering kit, laptop
So roughly 400/450quid - for a complete home-build set-up that you can map on the road.
Doing the initial build is pretty straight forward. Working out the wiring/resistors, extra connectors etc for the ignition side was the hardest thing probably and even that wasn't really an issue. You also need to add a couple of very small additions to the board to get things like idle control and tach signal out of it (stuff that I haven't done yet -- but it's easy enough I'm just lazy
After that the thing actually started the car pretty much first first turn of the key. I then had an issue because I had the crank sensor wired in backwards which wasted me a few hours. Now I have a problem with not being able to rev above 5500rpm which is bloody strange but I've been getting help from various folk in the MS community. Of course if you buy a ready made kit and loom you're less likely to have problems like this and you can of course get support from the supplier.
A good option to buy ready-made is from http://www.extraefi.co.uk/ where you'll be buying form Phil Ringwood who's one of the people who actually wrote the extensions to the basic megasquirt that turns it from just a fuel controller in to a full engine management system (known as MegaSquirt'n Spark-extra). Basically he's one of the UK's top MS gurus
If you want a self-build kit, you can try getting hold of Bill Shurvinton on the http://www.msextra.com/ forum --he supplied mine. I believe the forum also has links to various uk suppliers.
So - current status of my car is that it can runs on MS, and it runs very very well even with a rough map the power at least as good as with the stock motronic (up to 5500rpm) if not better, arse dyno of course.
Next steps for me are to fix up the air intake, idle control, tach signal and solve the 5500rpm problem then I can work on doing a proper map. I want to work it out on the road first using tools like MSTweak and MegaLogViewer, they can help you interpret the data logs that MS can record to help you map. Apparently you can get very good results on the road like this. Of course, this type of tuning requires time and a wide-band so for similar costs overall you could ditch the wide-band and send it in to be mapped properly and save the time. But for me half the point of it is to learn how to do the mapping.
Anyway. Hopefully that answers a few questions people might have about MS.







Motronic to Megasquirt Plug and Play Guide
