The long term adjusts to keep the short term happy and in the center of it's range so it can make quick adjustments in either direction. If short term goes all the way negative long term will adjust itself to make short term get back to near zero so short term can do it's job, short term needs to be able to quickly respond in either direction constantly , so it's long term's job to keep short term in the middle of it's range so it can do that. The fact that your long term stays negative means there is a rich condition, or a perceived rich condition. It's not going to move positive until short term starts demanding more fuel by moving positive itself, which it's not going to do if it's getting info that there is a rich condition.
This is the best video I know of on fuel trims, it's 46 minutes long but well worth it for anyone interested in understanding fuel trims.
I agree. I don’t think it’s a positive read. I think it’s a false read causing the rich condition. The cherry red exhaust and worsening performance issues with rising temps leads me to believe it’s actually lean but signaling rich thus making the lean condition worse. What the hell is causing it tho ??? My O2 reads are good bouncing between .08 and .68 steady. The MAP is reading right. 1.5 at full throttle. The intake air reads about 165 degrees today which seems legit. The coolant sensor is reading 210-215 until the lean AF mix causes the motor to heat up. There’s prolly some damn simple explanation but I just can’t see it. It’s driving me crazy.
