My Infiniti Tech says he can't do 2 degree timing bump

I know but if the stock timing isn't knocking with 87 octane, I would think that +2 degrees would be acceptable with 93 octane. An then if on a hot and humid day there is a little knock, it will retard itself.
I know a full tune is better, but a lot of the power they get is from more timing.
Doesn't matter now since I don't think I will be getting it done.
 
I have heard the same thing about the 06-Present...It can be done but the ECU remaps it self to where it was before and you lose the benifit...I drive an 05 so cannot confirm just passing along hearsay

I've heard this too, but cannot confirm. Only I want to add, this will only happen if you pull the power for, say a 24 hr period, as in the batt cables, not just w/ an ECU pedal method reset.
 
I have done the +2 on my 06 35 through Cipher. Don't have any direct feedback for Nissan's ability to do it or not. However, I can definitely say that I felt a good responsiveness, especially on low rpm range. It's true that it's retarding timing at the higher range. In fact, I have proof using the Cipher timing outputs that it's retarding at the high range but not at the lower rpm range. This is where our heavy ass FXs lag the most and I think +2 is a REALLY good & cheap way to improve this range.. For people who don't go half throttle much or pass through the 4000rpm line quickly, it might not be useful at all.. It's also less useful at hot places since your ECU will retard it quicker, but in North East or anywhere cold, it's a great mod... Just my .02...
 
Just to add.. If you have places like TS near you, go for it instead of this.. A good full tune is always better than a minimal timing bump.. If not though, you're pretty much stuck with paying $500 to TS for just A/F adjustment and your FX will stay disabled for 4 days at least..
 
Good input. Looks like in the cold, it isnt for not

---------- Post added at 12:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:28 PM ----------

Ya, I've noticed that when it's cooler, even 10-15 degrees, the FX seems more peppy.

Who's doesnt? :ehh:
 
Good input. Looks like in the cold, it isnt for not

---------- Post added at 12:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 12:28 PM ----------



Who's doesnt? :ehh:
I'm talking like 86 degrees, so still pretty hot, but cooler than usual.
 
Regarding relashing-Technosquare had/has nothing set-up for my 06' 45 yet, not sure if their R&D stops at 05' right now-Jet chip is more customizeable but its not cheap at $500, I pulled this from an earlier thread-

JetChip (http://www.jetchip.com/) has extremely customizable options. You pay them a flat $500 fee and they'll send you a box with instructions. You use these instructions to pull your ECU and send it to them in the box (with OVERLY CAREFUL packing - 100% guarantee your ECU won't be damaged). They get the ECU, hack into it and determine if they can reflash your existing ECU, add a piggy-back program, or if an ECU swap unit must be made. You provide them with a dyno sheet after you've done ALL of your modifications planned, they'll correct your A/F ratio throughout the band for maximum performance and A/F safe mix, and you also tell them if you want your speed limiter (130-135 mph on our FXs) removed, manu-matic shifting quicker (no "luxury" delay) and other options"

Everything I have heard is that the advance does hold and that you SHOULD run 92+ (per Dr.2K)

Another past thread-Stock timing on an FX35 is +15 BTDC (as per underneath the hood, driver's side label) and FX45 is +12 BTDC. Timing bump changes this to +17 and +14, respectively. What does this mean? This means that the spark plug will fire EARLIER in the cycle, causing a more complete fuel/air burn since there's more time allowed for the ignite. You'll have some gains from this, but you'll lose 1 mpg (worthy trade-off in my opinion). The down-side is knock/ping. If you do this, you MUST use 91 or 93 octane gas (which you should anyways, the extra 20 cents per gallon only costs you $100-150 extra per year on avg and saves your engine of knock and gives you increased power and fuel economy, which makes up for some of the extra cost you pay). This timing bump must be done by a tool called the "Consult" or a program on a laptop with appropriate OBD-II/USB cable. A Nissan or Infiniti dealer can do this for you, and it is recommended to speak with a tech instead of a manager. If you speak with a tech while getting serviced or at the dealer for any reason for your car, you might be able to get him to do this for free, since it is a 5 minute plug-n-play procedure. Ask that they advance your timing 2 degrees, but make sure they know you want it +14 or +17 total (+12+2=+14 and +15+2=+17), and not +2 or you'll get horrible power loss (honda-civic-style-power). The program I was talking about is called Cipher, and the whole setup to do this is $400, however, a tech may charge you anywhere from $40-100 to do this simple plug in and input, where they plug in to the port to the bottom-left of your steering wheel column. They can also see if you have any fault codes..

Can't remember who posted these originally but thanks......
 
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