I've heard a lot in the FiST community about parts causing false knock. While I'm sure that some people may have gotten false knock during some of their pulls, I don't think that individual parts have been the cause and would most likely blame it on maintenance, i.e.-loose mounting hardware, clamps touching parts, etc. In the sake of helping people understand what they would be seeing, I grabbed a few shots from datalogs that I've taken to help give a visual comparison. And if anyone has legitimately experienced false knock due specifically to an aftermarket part then please post some charts so we can compare to others that may have the same part.
First things first, you absolutely must be grabbing your datalogs correctly to begin with. I'm not going to cover that here, but speak with your tuner and clarify exactly what data they want you to collect and find the smoothest and most level road within what you consider reasonable distance. The key is to eliminate as many variables as possible for accuracy, and if you have done enough pulls you will start to see variances between road imperfections, incline, etc. I have the perfect stretch of road immediately leaving my subdivision, but it's always populated so my next best option is 45 minutes away-which is what I use. Again, the best road within your own convenience.
Secondly, you must take multiple logs. There have been a few times where I started a log too soon or didn't transition to WOT very well and had variances in my data, and I wouldn't have known if I hadn't taken multiple logs. Just because you see negative corrections or a misalignment between cylinders does not mean that you are experiencing false knock, which I'll show in a bit, and that's why it's imperative to have another log to compare it against.
Here is an example of what is normal. This is two logs from an OTS tune on my FiST with high-quality Shell 93 octane.
You'll notice that the cylinders are all in near perfect alignment, the corrections are consistent and clean, and that the data is very similar between both logs. This tells you a lot, but the main takeaway is that they are clean logs free of noise. I could post more FiST logs but it would be a waste of tune for you to look at because even though the data changes they are all extremely linear.
By contrast, here are some FoST logs with the Cobb RMM and fuel from the exact same station-
Which you can compare to the OEM RMM-
So, there's a lot to learn from comparing just the 6 pictures posted. First, at least from my perspective, is that the FiST is significantly easier to get properly tuned as it's significantly more consistent. Second, if you compare the Cobb RMM logs to each other you'll notice that the corrections are not only different individually, one log has two cylinders paired and the other has one cylinder completely inconsistent with the other three. Finally, in the logs with the OEM RMM installed they all follow a continuous pattern in comparison to the Cobb RMM. Of course more tuning can bring them better in line, but the difference between the pics should give a good idea of differences and the inconsistencies that you would run into with actual false knock.
Hopefully this helps or leads to better discussions.
First things first, you absolutely must be grabbing your datalogs correctly to begin with. I'm not going to cover that here, but speak with your tuner and clarify exactly what data they want you to collect and find the smoothest and most level road within what you consider reasonable distance. The key is to eliminate as many variables as possible for accuracy, and if you have done enough pulls you will start to see variances between road imperfections, incline, etc. I have the perfect stretch of road immediately leaving my subdivision, but it's always populated so my next best option is 45 minutes away-which is what I use. Again, the best road within your own convenience.
Secondly, you must take multiple logs. There have been a few times where I started a log too soon or didn't transition to WOT very well and had variances in my data, and I wouldn't have known if I hadn't taken multiple logs. Just because you see negative corrections or a misalignment between cylinders does not mean that you are experiencing false knock, which I'll show in a bit, and that's why it's imperative to have another log to compare it against.
Here is an example of what is normal. This is two logs from an OTS tune on my FiST with high-quality Shell 93 octane.
You'll notice that the cylinders are all in near perfect alignment, the corrections are consistent and clean, and that the data is very similar between both logs. This tells you a lot, but the main takeaway is that they are clean logs free of noise. I could post more FiST logs but it would be a waste of tune for you to look at because even though the data changes they are all extremely linear.
By contrast, here are some FoST logs with the Cobb RMM and fuel from the exact same station-
Which you can compare to the OEM RMM-
So, there's a lot to learn from comparing just the 6 pictures posted. First, at least from my perspective, is that the FiST is significantly easier to get properly tuned as it's significantly more consistent. Second, if you compare the Cobb RMM logs to each other you'll notice that the corrections are not only different individually, one log has two cylinders paired and the other has one cylinder completely inconsistent with the other three. Finally, in the logs with the OEM RMM installed they all follow a continuous pattern in comparison to the Cobb RMM. Of course more tuning can bring them better in line, but the difference between the pics should give a good idea of differences and the inconsistencies that you would run into with actual false knock.
Hopefully this helps or leads to better discussions.