If you have a dramatic difference in weather between summer and winter where you live, should you get your custom tune done in winter or summer? (Is there a temperature direction in which the car compensates better?)
There was a big thread about this a year or two ago. Might be worth digging up. It was pretty divisive iirc.If you have a dramatic difference in weather between summer and winter where you live, should you get your custom tune done in winter or summer? (Is there a temperature direction in which the car compensates better?)
Sweet! I'll dig it up.There was a big thread about this a year or two ago. Might be worth digging up. It was pretty divisive iirc.
Well, that was easy. Used Google, found a post, and guess what........ It's covered on page 1 of this thread.
JS12 and Navi both had their questions answered about it:
https://www.golfmk7.com/forums/index.php?threads/eqt-e-tuning-q-a.361928/post-7272813
@Navi Did you end up getting a cold/hot New York revision tune?
A more thorough review of the EQT remote dyno tune. After a full day of driving making deliveries anyone on the fence as to whether or not to get an EQT tune vs another tuner I say just get the EQT tune. Ed says that he adjusts more parameters than other tuners and I agree that he must. I've already said that after my tune the car felt so much smoother and faster. But it's the little things in daily driving that make the tune really stand out. I have the DSG and there's a few hills that I drive up everyday and in Drive mode with my previous tune going up those hills the car would always auto downshift to maintain the same speed with the same throttle input. With the EQT tune it doesn't downshift it just goes up the hill maintaining the speed. The throttle resposne is instantaneous. Just in casual driving in Drive mode when it shifts gears it's so responsive I don't have to apply as much throttle. My previous tune required more throttle input and just wasn't as responsive. Also since it has got hot in Phoenix I was getting an EPC light with heavy throttle beyond 5000 RPM. I asked the dyno place to do a baseline run on my existing tune and because it was 107 degrees he couldn't complete the run because the EPC light would come on putting it into limp mode. The place that did the tune that I went to this appointment with suggested that it was probably the TPC20 that was just installed. It was their tune and it's fine now. One last thing. I scheduled the remote dyno tune with EQT a month ago. I arrived at the local dyno place 30 minutes early and mentioned that I hadn't heard from EQT since I scheduled it and sure enough Ed contacted that shop at the time it was scheduled for. I honestly felt I was wasting my time because the EPC light coming on had just started a few days prior to this when the temperature in Phoenix started hitting 110 degrees. It was too late to cancel the appointment so I went there anyway expecting to be told I need to solve the EPC light first not considering that it could be my current tune since it had been fine to that point. That was a long paragraph. Now get an EQT tune.
Damn, not only do we need summer and winter tires, but now we need summer and winter tunes too?