I came up with my own number games. Stoich or a Lambda of 1.0 for a Hellcat is 13.85 (FAR value of 0.0722, divide 1 by 13.85). So lets say I want to target 11.50 as my AFR, what would that be in Lambda, well it's a ratio value, less than 1 means rich, more than 1 means lean. To get my modifier value to add to FAR I came up with the following
((1/11.5) - 0.0722) = ~0.0147. The correct place to stuff this value would be in either table 34230 FA Power enrich based on aircharge or 34243 FA Power enrich based on pratio.
I feel like Lambda in a dodge PCM is nothing more than a gimmick unless my maths are wrong. So lets say I want to target 11.5 from 13.85. That's a percentage in Lambda so solve for x...
13.85 * x = 11.50
x = 11.5/13.85
x = ~ 0.830
Well that's great and all but how can I convert that to FAR... to know what to add to my modifier tables...
From a tuning standpoint, your mind is in the right place, but not exactly correct. Stoich is for a certain fuel, NOT a vehicle. Why the hellcat has an error built in I'm unsure. A few example of stoich displayed in AFR is 0% ethanol gasoline = 14.7 10% ethanol gasoline is roughly 14.5 E85 is 9.76 methanol 6.46 and diesel is 14.50.
Lambda is stoich at 1.00 the way it was explained to me is Stoich means a complete burn. It takes 14.5 parts of air for every 1 part of e10 gasoline to have a complete burn. Rather than remembering stoich values for many different fuels, its easier for tuning purposes to just use lambda imo
1.0 is stoich no matter the fuel, so if you're looking for a certain enrichment rate, you can just calculate (or cross reference a chart) to see what your target lambda should be regardless of fuel.
For example, on most NA hemi builds I target a lambda of .85 which calculates out to 12.5afr for gasoline. For e10 that would be about 12.3afr and for e85 would be 8.20 afr
Rather that trying to remember all the stoich values in my head. I just set the log to read in lambda and go from there. Other ways would be to reference one fuel (gasoline for example) if my wideband is reading 12.5 afr while configured to display gasoline afr, I would be correct no matter the fuel.
Remember, and oxygen sensor is just that. Nothing more. It is measuring unburnt oxygen in the exhaust system and calculating a reading. If you're using a stand alone wideband and tuned properly you should display 14.7 on 0% ethanol gasoline, 14.5 on 10% gasoline, 9.76 for e85 and so on. The reading will not change based on fuel even though the stoich value does.
I'm beginning to realize I'm rambling. Hopefully I didn't confuse anyone any worse than they possibly were