I had my car taken to a workshop for engine rebuild and tune-up.
Unfortunately, the second life of my Toyota lasted only about 1000miles
The first 500 miles resulted in killed turbocharger and constant "check-engine" light caused by knock sensor
After this I replaced the turbo with a big rebuilt hybrid and the DET3 piggytail was replaced with EMU to have things monitored
I left the car to the tuner to have Ecumaster DET3 removed and EMU installed instead
The result was burned out exhaust valves and the brand new turbocharger killed by the tuner while he was preparing a "safe" map for the run-in period.
I have had the engine head fixed now and assembled the engine again (work done myself this time)
My guess is the distributor was set to wrong ingnition angle and the tuner had not checked this with a stroboscope before uploading maps
When I was assembling the engine I aligned the distributor to where it probably was before the failure (basing on bolt marks) , the strobo showed 15 deg. There were also some other bolt marks on the distributor in a completely wrong position. Someone had to have it bolted in a very wrong position at some time.
After this I corrected the timing advance to stock 10deg
The car now feels much slower than it was before the failure (same turbo, turbo rebuilt again)
Before failure there was a crazy quick boost spoolup, now there is a slow spoolup which I would normally expect from a big turbo
So my guess is the problem was mechanical adjustment of the timing advance
Please take a look at the maps that I found in my EMU and tell if they look sensible
I need something to start with the third life of the car
Compression ratio is 9:0
Thanks for any advice
