So I guess we'll start off with my fuel woes, since this is a common theme. It's important you know about my car for any of this to make sense. I have:
1991 Subaru Legacy L Wagon
Turbo Swap completed minus the EJ22T ECU.
Stock Injectors till this past Tuesday (270cc?)
N/A stock intake manifold and fuel rails.
Not long after the swap I determined that boost was creeping enough to anything after about 5psi and the engine started to det/hesitate bad. real bad. so I did some digging for some quick fixes and found one about the fuel pressure regulator cap. talked to vrg3 about fuel pressure/etc (there's a thread around here about that)
So I took the spare FPR I had and did this:


I later found out via pressure testing (I used the air pressure regulator on my air compressor) that the modified one (crushed in with a c-clamp ever so gently) registered about 7psi higher over the non-modified one at static pressure; which means under 5psi boost it could have been anywhere from 7psi higher to well beyond when compared to the non-modded one on the same amount of pressure; but I didn't have a fuel pressure gauge to check it. I was told that pushing the cap in changes the rising rate ratio as well as the static fuel pressure; no clue if that's true or not.
anyway, long story short that didn't last. This past weekend it turned especially cold out, and I was detting again, just as much as before. I decided I was going to have to give the EJ22T injectors I had laying around another go.
I'd previously tried them, and reported that they just fuel far too much for the engine to even idle; me and doug got in an argument about they don't fit/etc and I was just blowing fuel into the cylinders past the injectors - it was very possible that I had failed to seat them properly. never the less I tried again.
There's a few points to take from this: don't work on a hot engine, don't pull injectors out of the rails when the engine is hot either. fuel in the rails doesn't boil BECAUSE of the pressure it's under, but remove the pressure and it boils away quite rapidly.
Unfortunately I pulled #3 (I think) injector, by the time I figured out that the rails was boiling fuel, pulling it from the tank, and flooding a cylinder the cylinder was already flooded. I disconnected the feed fuel line to stop the suction process and cranked the engine with the coilpack disconnected, spark plug pulled out, and promptly got fuel over everything within a 10 foot radius.
my oil seems to have survived, with not even a hint of a fuel smell to it.
The EJ22T injectors are almost identical to the N/A 1991 injectors.
Proof:


EJ22T on top, EJ22 N/A on bottom; you can clearly see the different size flow nozzles:

Installed:

So I got them installed, didn't bother pulling the battery cable and just cranked the engine. it took about five turnovers for the engine to catch and run on it's own - holy shit it's rich.
You have no idea. I was fogged out of my garage. I had to open the garage door and vent the garage for a half hour.
I took the car out. remember I'm using the N/A ECU, so this thing is trying to idle on injectors 30% larger and it's damn near stalling every now and then.
I drove it to work the following day, I had a quarter tank before I parked the night before and did the injector swap; normally a quarter tank will get me to work and back (~50 miles) and have a good 50 miles left in the tank. No.
I pulled in the fuel stop with the gauge well below the E mark, no low fuel indicator light (it was working the week before) and put 13.5 gallons of 93 octane in the tank. More than I'd ever had to before. it cost me $40
That evening I pulled my modded FPR off and put the stocker back on - it dropped the flow rates in the injectors, but the engine was still too rich at idle. The ecu was trying to correct the rich condition but i take it that the pulse width control is quite grainy: it was cutting them off and nearly stalling the engine (slow enough for the oil pressure light to flash)
I let the ECU sit last night disconnected from the battery, drove it today (as well as yesterday) and it seems to be a little better; it's still quite rich at idle (unburned fuel smells really really bad out the exhaust - lends oneself to make a choking noise)
By tonight I'm down to half way between 1/2 tank and 1/4 tank, I've gone 135 miles; it's about 30 miles short of average but it's not HORRIBLE. I suspect I've burned about 8 gallons at this rate and that works out to about 16mpg.
The Good: It pulls strong. If you've read some of my other replies lately I've had trouble controlling boost, it creeps something awful; well on up to 10psi pretty easily. the injectors flow enough to keep it nice and rich even up top and I don't suffer any hesitation at all.
10psi is faster than a stock Legacy SS, so I imagine that stands for something.
Okay, if you're still with me after that long assed rabble-rabble; I've considered modding my ECU. I want to buy an Autronic, but this fuel problem needs to get solved in a hurry - and I'd rather not spend $$$ on a piggyback I'm going to toss.
So I removed my ECU tonight and took some photos:










In a fit of amateur-ness I managed to lose the pictures of the EPROM at a distance (showing the location of the EPROM) but I can describe it (the ecu is already back in the car)
It's located on the daughter board which is connected by the wire ribbon pairs you see in one of the above pictures. the blue male-type wide socket is to the left of the EPROM, not directly over it.
The photo with the silver label on it is the EPROM, unfortunately I didn't take a further out picture to count the pins now; I'm just a noob - but I'm assuming it's much like the EJ22T EPROM just programmed differently/different data points.
what I need to do is find a relatively cheap EPROM reader/burner and the software to drive it. I'll go get a junk ECU from a parts yard and pull the EPROM off of it (so I don't render my ecu useless) and dump the code from it and work with that (unless someone here can provide me with the EJ22 N/A ECU's code for my model year car.
As I understand it the fuel and timing maps are all located in the first 8KB of the EPROM, so if I can get access to the maps for my ecu I can modify the fueling map at idle and burn a new EPROM, remove the old, install a socket and drop the new EPROM in and see if i can't fry some electronics in the process.
any thoughts?