B16A2 in my 97 civic ex...still slow!

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pinto

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I just got a 1997 civic w/ b16a2 swap. The guy tells me it needs p72 ecu to run, bc the p2t ecu (original si ecu?) will not work. The car is retarded slow, gets absolutely no power from 1st to 3rd gear. I have to shift @ ~4K rpm IN EVERY GEAR, which kills mpg ratio. Autozone says that I need a new distributor, spark plugs, o2 sensor and wire set. Should I believe autozone and hand over the money, or believe the guy who sold it to me, who says he's never changed the distributor?
 
that first thing you did wrong... autozone over priced and bullshit is what i always get from them
go to advance auto parts
they know more
i work there
 
That really all depends on the area- some places AutoZone is better, some Advance etc......

As for who to trust- I would take the car to someone who knows swaps before taking the word of the guy who sold it to you and obviously doesn't know how to get it to run right or a shop that probably has no idea what's been done to the car. Whoever did the swap probably didn't wire it up correctly.
 
yea you are right
is the ecu from a dohc motor? if not that would be one problem
but yea talk to peolpe that know swaps and that can actually look at it to see about that wiring
 
check this y




[ ECU PART NUMBER LEGEND ]


ECU's denoted in red are reprogrammable & supported by me.
ECU's denoted in
orange
are supported for IMMobilizer removal only.


OBD U.S. (88-91)
DPFi = Dual Point Fuel Injection
MPFi = Multi Point Fuel Injection

· PM5 civic/crx STD/DX; DPFi
· PM6 civic/crx Si; MPFi, 88-89 PM6's are not reprogrammable, only 90-91 are.
· PM8 crx HF; MPFi
· PR4 integra RS/LS/GS
OBD JDM (88-91)
· PM7 civic/crx Si DOHC ZC; semi-rare ecu
· PR3 civic/crx SiR & integra XSi/RSi DOHC VTEC (B16A)
· PW0 civic/crx SiR & integra XSi/RSi DOHC VTEC (B16A)


OBD-1 U.S. (92-95)

· PR4 integra RS/LS/LS-SE/GS (B18B); same programming as P74 & P75
· P0A accord EX (SOHC VTEC)
· P05 civic CX; uses 1-wire 02 sensor, convertable to VTEC (may vary)
· P06 civic DX (D15B); convertable to VTEC (may vary) & supports B-series DOHC VTEC& non-VTEC programming
· P07 civic VX (D15B SOHC VTEC-E); 2 versions of this ecu - one is P28-like, the other is an oddball ecu and is not suggested for reprogramming, uses 5-wire 02 sensor. P28-style P07 supports B-series DOHC VTEC programming.
· P14 prelude Si DOHC (H23)
· P13 prelude DOHC VTEC (H22A)
· P28 civic Si/EX (D16Z6 SOHC VTEC); reprogrammable to DOHC VTEC
· P30 civic delsol Si VTEC (B16A)
· P61 integra GSR (B17A); only availabe in the US
· P72 integra GS-R (B18C1)
· P74 integra RS/LS/LS-SE/GS (B18B); same programming as PR4 & P75
· P75 integra RS/LS/LS-SE/GS (B18B); same programming as PR4 & P74
OBD-1 JDM/EURO (92-95)
· PR3 integra XSi/RSi DOHC VTEC (B16A); semi-rare ecu, equivilent to a US P30 ecu.
· P08 civic VTi (D15B SOHC VTEC); small ecu body, equivilent to a P28, supports B-series DOHC VTEC programming
· P13 prelude DOHC VTEC (H22A); only supports JDM P13 programming
· P27 civic coupe (D16A); rare ecu, equivilent to a P28. supports B-series DOHC VTEC programming
· P29 civic (DOHC ZC); rare ecu! equivilent to a P06/DX ecu. supports B-series DOHC programming
· P30 civic SiR & delsol SiR (B16A); small ecu body
· P72 integra SiR/SiR-G (B18C); small ecu body
· P91 civic orthio (D16A SOHC VTEC); rare but equivilent to a P28, supports B-series DOHC VTEC programming


OBD-2a U.S. (96-98)
· P2E civic DX coupe
· P2N civic HX coupe; uses a 5-wire 02 sensor
· P2P civic EX coupe (D16Y8)
· P72 integra GS-R (B18C)
· P75 integra RS/LS & LS-SE/GS
· P13 96-97 prelude VTEC ( H22A); rare ecu!
· P5M prelude VTEC (H22A); remained OBD2a from 98-00
OBD2a JDM
· P2T civic Si coupe (B16A)
· PCT civic Type-R (EK9/B16B)
· P73 integra Type-R (B18C)


OBD-2b U.S. (99-01)
· P2T civic Si coupe (B16A)
· P72 integra GS-R (B18C); Immobilizer equipped
· P73 integra Type-R (B18C5); Immobilizer equipped
· P75 integra RS/LS/GS (B18B), Immobilzer equipped
OBD-2b (JDM)
· PCB prelude Type-S
· PCT civic Type-R (EK9/B16B)
· PCX S2000 (F20C)


OBD-2c

· PRB A01-A05 RSX Type-S (US)
· PRC RSX Type-R (JDM)
· PRD Civic Type-R (JDM)


© 2004-2006 www.ff-squad.com. All rights reserved


ou ecu is fine
 
try this and get back to me
This article describes how to trick a U.S. OBD2a or OBD2b ecu into thinking a CKF sensor is wired in when there actually is no CKF sensor on the engine.

What is the CKF sensor?
The CKF is the Crank Fluctuation Sensor.
On all 96+ (OBD2) Honda/Acura vehicles, this sensor is integrated onto the oil pump.
(CKF images soon)

This trick is mainly aimed to help hybriders who are using a U.S. OBD2a/b ecu in their vehicle, but their motors are lacking a CKF sensor. For example, running an JDM OBD2 engine in a US 96+ vehicle but retaining the US OBD2 ecu. For those that don't know, when using a US OBD2 ecu and the CKF sensor is not wired in, the engine runs like total crap. This trick basically taps the CKF into the CKP signal.

This wire trick will save you money (around $300) and headaches!


PROCEDURE

  1. Please refer to the ecu pin out page respective to your OBD2 type and take note of the CKF pin locations:
    OBD2a pin out schematics
    OBD2b pin out schematics
  2. Get 4 Scotch-lock/tap splicers
    Sometimes dubbed 'quick splice', these can be real life savers.
    Get yourself 2 of these bad boys and a pair of pliers for the squeezing-splicing portion of the job.

  3. Locate ECU pins

    OBD2a Users:
    This mod requires you to quick splice a total of 4 wires (2 wires per quick splice).
    Locate the blue ecu plug "C":

    Now locate pinout C1 (CKFP) and C4 (CYPP) ; using the pliers quick-splice these two wires together as shown:

    Then locate pin C11 (CKFM) and C14 (CYPM) and quick-splice these two wires together as shown:

    That's it!
    Your finished OBD2a quick-splice job should look something like this:


    OBD2b Users:
    This mod requires you to quick splice a total of 4 wires (2 wires per quick splice).
    Locate the blue ecu plug "C":

    Now locate pinout C22 (CKFP) and C29 (CYPP) ; using the pliers quick-splice these two wires together as shown:

    Then locate pin C30 (CYPM) and C31 (CKFM); quick-splice these two wires together as shown:

    That's it!
    Your finished OBD2b quick-splice job should look something like this:
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

None. CONTRIBUTIONS / PROPS


Special thanks to THIS THREAD on Honda-tech and to the poster omahaturbocivic who exploited this trick!!!
The information in this article applies to:

  • All US 96-00 civics & 96-01 integra's
 
wow...i havent seen this thread in a while.... wow almost a month.... so if i have the p72 ecu and harness, and given my car is 97 ex w/ 2000 b16a2 engine, the above mentioned procedure would work? man i gotta find this... i'm still working on my problem!!!
 
wow...i havent seen this thread in a while.... wow almost a month.... so if i have the p72 ecu and harness, and given my car is 97 ex w/ 2000 b16a2 engine, the above mentioned procedure would work? man i gotta find this... i'm still working on my problem!!!
first things first, how fast do you expect it to be? it wont be that fast. it's a heavy car with a low hp engine. if you really want to find out if something is wrong with the power, save your money, go to a shop and pay $30 to get a baseline dyno run. this will show you where your power curves are.

if you get 130hp to the wheels you are doing good. b16's really aren't going to be a whole lot faster than the sohc vtec. but it is always good to do a full tune up.
 
it's not necessarily about being faster than other civics... it's being able to keep up with normal, daily driving traffic. at an uphill stop light, I am the slowest of the pack, seeming like the car is running on 2 cylinders. I just want it running correctly before even assuming i have power to run against other tuners.
 
its not the ecu nor a tune-up! i owned an ek hatch with a b18c5 with basic bolt ons( jdm 4-1 header, intake, cat back, complete msd ignition) and the car still ran like crap. im guessing the culprit was the weight of the car. my friends own eg hatches with b18c1 motors and pull on me all day long! i can imagine a b16a2 in an ek! i can take an ek with a b18c1 motor though! just an opinion!!!!
 
it's not necessarily about being faster than other civics... it's being able to keep up with normal, daily driving traffic. at an uphill stop light, I am the slowest of the pack, seeming like the car is running on 2 cylinders. I just want it running correctly before even assuming i have power to run against other tuners.
then you need to get it on a dyno. if you don't have a check engine light, then you need to find it's power and where it's weak.
 
hey man i need a OBD2A ECU for my 97 civic ex automatic .. i wonder if u got it...
 
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