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ECM TITANIUM 3.0 – GASOLINE – SECTION 3

SECTION 3 — First practical modification stage of the ECU firmware: air load, turbo pressure, fueling, and rail pressure recalibration
Prerequisites
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Course details
Duration 3 hours
Lectures 17
Video 20 minutes
Quizzes 4
Level ADVANCED
A certificate is issued upon completion
LIFETIME ACCESS
Developed for desktop PCs and large screens
Basic info

The Course is dedicated to demonstrating the majority of the most useful and used features and functions of the software titled 'ECM TITANIUM 3.0' developed by ALIENTECH

Course requirements

The Course does not impose any special requirements to participants. Any knowledge level is sufficient for taking the Course. There are NO SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS for this Course!

Intended audience

The Course is intended for any person willing to learn how to use the ECM TITANIUM 3.0 software developed by ALIENTECH. The course is suitable for any level of knowledge

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  • Description
  • Curriculum
  • FAQ
  • Notice

The easiest and most practical Course section for learning how to perform the first real ‘STAGE 1’ ECU firmware modifications using ECM Titanium 3.0, the professional ECU firmware editor developed by ALIENTECH!

In this section, we move from analysis to real calibration work. After studying the original ECU firmware in Section 2, we now begin modifying the maps step by step, following the stock ECU strategy and the values discovered during the analysis stage. This section is designed to show beginner and advanced tuners how to make the first safe and logical ‘STAGE 1’ changes without random editing, excessive increases, or unsafe assumptions.

You will start with the Requested Engine Load map, where the ECU requests the amount of air or cylinder filling needed for improved performance. You will learn how to convert air percentage values into real physical pressure values, such as kPa, millibars, and bar, so that the tuning logic becomes clearer and easier to control. Then you will modify the Turbo Pressure Limiters, adjust the Injection System maps to keep combustion safe, and recalibrate the Rail Pressure maps to support the updated fuel delivery strategy.

Every modification is explained in a practical, step-by-step way. You will learn not only what values to enter, but also why these values are used, how they are connected to the original firmware analysis, and how to keep the ECU logic smooth, consistent, and safe. This section teaches you to work like a careful tuner: analyze first, modify only the relevant areas, check the result, save the work correctly, and prepare the file for the next stage of calibration.

Things you will learn in this Section:

  • How to move from firmware analysis to the first real ‘STAGE 1’ modifications;
  • Why the Requested Engine Load map is the starting point for the modification process;
  • How to work with an ECU that uses an air-based strategy;
  • How to convert air percentage / cylinder filling into real physical pressure values;
  • How to convert air percentage into kPa, millibars, and bar;
  • Why 4,000 RPM is used as a key reference point for calculations and modifications;
  • Why requested load values must be higher than limiter values;
  • How to modify the Requested Engine Load map safely;
  • Why the last column is changed to 200% air;
  • Why the penultimate column is smoothed by 6%;
  • How to use 3D view to compare original and modified values;
  • How to inspect changes using the INCREASE function;
  • How to save the first modified map correctly;
  • How to modify the Turbo Pressure Limiter maps;
  • How to work with maps that contain several tables inside;
  • How to activate tables for editing using the Enter key;
  • How to use Page Up and Page Down to move between tables;
  • How to use Row/Column Graphs for one-column limiter maps;
  • How to apply smooth interpolated changes instead of flat random increases;
  • How to use Percentage increment in the interpolation window;
  • How to modify the turbo limiter range from 2,000 RPM to 4,000 RPM;
  • How to modify the higher RPM range up to 6,800 RPM;
  • Why the turbo pressure limiter values must not exceed 170% air;
  • How to correct values that go above the safe target of 170% air;
  • How to copy percentage increments to similar tables inside one map;
  • How to modify the main Limiter of Turbo Pressure map given in hPa;
  • Why the hPa-based limiter must stay above the new boost pressure value;
  • How to apply gradual 5% / 10% interpolation to the hPa-based turbo pressure limiter;
  • Why fueling adjustments are necessary after increasing air volume and boost pressure;
  • How to modify the Requested Lambda map;
  • What lambda means in relation to AFR and safe combustion;
  • Why lower lambda values mean a richer air-fuel mixture;
  • Why the high-load / high-RPM area of the lambda map is modified;
  • How to gradually move toward a target lambda value of 0.86;
  • How to use negative percentage increments for lambda enrichment;
  • How to modify Lambda for Component Protection maps safely;
  • Why values lower than 0.8 are changed to exactly 0.8;
  • Why component protection maps are corrected but not disabled;
  • How to save work in progress without exporting the final modified file;
  • How to use the Project registration in database window;
  • How to name and describe a work-in-progress modified file;
  • How to continue a saved modified project later;
  • Why the Rail Pressure folder must be adjusted after air, boost, and fueling changes;
  • How to modify four Rail Pressure maps consistently;
  • Why the working area is from 2,000 RPM and above and 50% load and above;
  • How to convert MPa into bar;
  • Why 15 MPa = 150 bar;
  • How to increase rail pressure maps by 5%;
  • Why a 5% increase brings 15 MPa to 15.75 MPa, or 157.5 bar;
  • How to modify rail pressure limiter maps;
  • How to work with a limiter based on fuel temperature;
  • How to modify a one-cell limiter map using the percentage input field and Page Up;
  • How to keep all modifications consistent with the ECU’s original logic.

Who is this Section intended for?

  • Beginner tuners who have completed the analysis stage and are ready to make their first real ECU modifications;
  • Students who want to understand how ‘STAGE 1’ tuning is actually performed in ECM Titanium 3.0;
  • Tuners who want a safe, structured workflow for modifying air, boost, fueling, and rail pressure maps;
  • Advanced users who want to compare their own workflow with a methodical, analysis-based calibration approach;
  • Anyone who wants to understand how Section 2 analysis is converted into practical map modifications.

Section summary

In Section 3, you start performing the actual ‘STAGE 1’ calibration. The work begins with the Requested Engine Load map and continues through the Turbo System, Injection System, and Rail Pressure maps. Every change is based on the values and conclusions discovered during the firmware analysis stage.

By the end of this Section, you will understand how to begin a safe and reliable ‘STAGE 1’ modification process by increasing requested air load, raising turbo pressure limiters, enriching the fuel mixture, correcting component protection lambda values, and adjusting rail pressure to support the new calibration.

This section teaches you the most important practical rule of safe ECU tuning: do not modify maps randomly — follow the original ECU strategy, use the values discovered during analysis, and make smooth, controlled changes only in the areas that matter.

Modification of 'Air Control' maps
Modification of 'Turbo System' maps
Modification of 'Injection System' maps
What level of knowledge should I have to take the Course?
The Course is suitable for any person, even with basic knowledge. There are no special requiredments to take the Course
Do I have to buy 'ECM TITANIUM 3.0' to take and complete the Course?
No. You do not have to buy the software. You are expected to follow the intructor, take notes and grasp the techniques and strategies demonstrated

To succesfuly complete the Course, you are required to take notes throughout the Course. The Course in essense is a step-by-step analysis of the contents of an ECU firmware developed by a vehicle manufacturer to identify the ECU operation strategy.

Based on the results of the analysis of the OEM ECU (Engine Control Unit), the participants of the Course will be able to independently peform remappings and recalibrations (modification of the maps contained in the firmware) up to 'STAGE 1' performance levels