Owner's manual
Page 30 
Appendix 
Oxygen Sensor theory. 
 Wide-band: 
 A wide-band sensor works by servo operation between a measuring cell (Nernst 
cell) and an oxygen pumping cell. These two cells are contained in the O2 sensor where 
the exhaust gas is sampled by a chamber connecting the two cells. The controller in the 
car will change the current applied to the pump cell in an attempt to keep the Nernst cell 
voltage at a predetermined level. The current that is needed to maintain this balance is 
the indication of AFR that the ECU uses. 
 When the F/IC is used to modify the signal from a wideband sensor the connection 
is made to the Nernst cell. Because the Nernst cell acts like a variable voltage source 
with a predictable impedance the F/IC can modify the current from the Nernst cell to 
effect a change to the AFR. 
 Narrow-band 0-1 V
DC
 Nernst type: 
 A narrow-band Nernst sensor produces a voltage that represents partial pressure of 
oxygen left in the exhaust after combustion. This voltage will switch very rapidly as the 
AFR moves in ether direction off of stoich (about 14.7:1). The cars controller manages 
this by dithering about stoich. The F/IC can override this signal with a programmable 
square-wave to keep the car ECU from seeing other changes that are being made to 
the fuel injectors or MAF. 
F/IC Specs 
Processor: Dual 16bit 32mips processors. 
Logger: 
Internal: 64 KB, 10ms max sample rate, 
    PC: 10 ms fixed sample rate. 
Pressure: 2 psi
a
 - 40 psi
a
 +/-.5 psi
a
 resolution .1 psi
a
MAF: 0 V
DC
 – 6 V
DC
 Input, 0 V
DC
 – 6 V
DC
 Output, overload protected 
  Power: 8-15 V
DC
Log switch: GND to activate 
Switched 12V output: High-side driver, 6 amps max, overload protected 
Injectors: 1.7 amps max, overload protected 
O2 : 0 V
DC
 - 4.95 V
DC
, 
Size: 5.5"L x 4.6"W x 1.4"H 










