Question about Over Rev Report
#1
Rennlist Member
Thread Starter
Question about Over Rev Report
Greetings.
Took my car in for service this week and I had them provide a DME readout. Results were a single ignition in all 6 ranges, all with the same time stamp. I understand that this is not physically possible, and that this is a common error.
Q: Have people been successful in getting the dealer to clear this from the DME? I'm not concerned about it, but I don't want it to be an issue when I sell.
BTW, car is an 08 Cayman, but I aspire to be a 997 owner.
Kit
Took my car in for service this week and I had them provide a DME readout. Results were a single ignition in all 6 ranges, all with the same time stamp. I understand that this is not physically possible, and that this is a common error.
Q: Have people been successful in getting the dealer to clear this from the DME? I'm not concerned about it, but I don't want it to be an issue when I sell.
BTW, car is an 08 Cayman, but I aspire to be a 997 owner.
Kit
#2
Drifting
I have those as well... nothing to worry about. It came CPO'd from the p-dealer that way and I have the time stamped dealer DME JIC. But when it comes time to sell... I would not sell my car to someone who makes an issue of 1's in a DME report.
Last edited by USMC_DS1; 08-24-2013 at 01:27 AM.
#4
Rennlist Member
3 ignitions per revolution so 1 ignition throughout all 6 ranges is impossible - can't have 1 in range 1 and 1 in range 6.
#6
Rennlist Member
Then you are eligible for a position on capitol hill.
#7
Rennlist Member
You're fine. It's mechanically impossible to get one ignition spread ver the rpm range. Ts just a computer glitch.
Trending Topics
#8
Drifting
#10
Race Director
Greetings.
Took my car in for service this week and I had them provide a DME readout. Results were a single ignition in all 6 ranges, all with the same time stamp. I understand that this is not physically possible, and that this is a common error.
Q: Have people been successful in getting the dealer to clear this from the DME? I'm not concerned about it, but I don't want it to be an issue when I sell.
BTW, car is an 08 Cayman, but I aspire to be a 997 owner.
Kit
Took my car in for service this week and I had them provide a DME readout. Results were a single ignition in all 6 ranges, all with the same time stamp. I understand that this is not physically possible, and that this is a common error.
Q: Have people been successful in getting the dealer to clear this from the DME? I'm not concerned about it, but I don't want it to be an issue when I sell.
BTW, car is an 08 Cayman, but I aspire to be a 997 owner.
Kit
But my WAG is what you have is over rev counters that are in the cleared state.
For time and space reasons I will be brief, but "zero" is not a suitable "zero" value for these counters.
My advice is to be sure you have an official printout of the DME report along with total engine runtime, the over rev counters and their "timestamps" (what is the timestamp for the counts?) and save this in a file of the car.
It is unlikely you will not hit at least the range 1 over rev limit so the next time the overrev counters are read the count value and timestamp in that counter will be different.
Furthermore, it would not surprise me that even some or all of the other counter values and their timestamps change too.
#12
Race Director
You should get a full printout that shows total hours. This is helpful for it lets you calculate average speed. A real low speed average can be a sign of odometer tamper.
I'm not an over rev counter expert but the numbers seem implausible to me. This has been discussed and theorized a bit with no real explanation for these seemingly implausible readings. My theory is they are some kind of tamper proofing, some encoding that lets Porsche know the numbers are real or have been, well, tampered with.
These counters represent consider financial exposure to Porsche. If there is a way to tamper with them they will be tampered with. Someone over revs the engine and blows it up and then tampers with the numbers and viola Porsche is on the hook for a new engine.
So just exactly what the numbers mean in this again seemingly implausible case is impossible to say.
When (if) the engine experiences actual over rev conditions either just bumping up against the rev limiter or beyond not only will the counters which are used to record the over rev events change but possibly the ones for which there are no over revs.
But unless one has easy access to a PIWIS2 (and something that can capture the communication between the PIWIS2 and the vehicle and its population of controllers, primarily the DME) and wants to experiment with reading, re-reading these counters and analyzing the captured bus traffic it is all speculation.
BTW, did you ask the dealer/service department for any input as to what the numbers mean?
Perhaps if you took on the attitude of concern about these numbers you might get something back from the factory that sheds some light on these numbers. Maybe. Frankly I suspect it is a long shot. A real long shot.
If they represent some form of encoding/tamper protection whoever at the factory that handles the dealer's enquiry will not know this or if he does will not share it with the dealer.
Likely if you can even get the service department to make a query on your behalf you'll get a "there is no problem" response with no further comment/explanation.
I'm not an over rev counter expert but the numbers seem implausible to me. This has been discussed and theorized a bit with no real explanation for these seemingly implausible readings. My theory is they are some kind of tamper proofing, some encoding that lets Porsche know the numbers are real or have been, well, tampered with.
These counters represent consider financial exposure to Porsche. If there is a way to tamper with them they will be tampered with. Someone over revs the engine and blows it up and then tampers with the numbers and viola Porsche is on the hook for a new engine.
So just exactly what the numbers mean in this again seemingly implausible case is impossible to say.
When (if) the engine experiences actual over rev conditions either just bumping up against the rev limiter or beyond not only will the counters which are used to record the over rev events change but possibly the ones for which there are no over revs.
But unless one has easy access to a PIWIS2 (and something that can capture the communication between the PIWIS2 and the vehicle and its population of controllers, primarily the DME) and wants to experiment with reading, re-reading these counters and analyzing the captured bus traffic it is all speculation.
BTW, did you ask the dealer/service department for any input as to what the numbers mean?
Perhaps if you took on the attitude of concern about these numbers you might get something back from the factory that sheds some light on these numbers. Maybe. Frankly I suspect it is a long shot. A real long shot.
If they represent some form of encoding/tamper protection whoever at the factory that handles the dealer's enquiry will not know this or if he does will not share it with the dealer.
Likely if you can even get the service department to make a query on your behalf you'll get a "there is no problem" response with no further comment/explanation.
#13
Rennlist Member
it's impossible. ghosts in the machine. any knowledgeable buyer (savvy enough to ask for a DME in the first place) will know same. drive and/or sell with confidence.
#15
Rennlist Member