What made them different? Most tuning software shows you what the sensors are doing. EFI Analytics shows you what to do about it . Their algorithms compare your actual air/fuel ratios against your target tables, then highlight the exact cells that need correction. No guessing. No "richen it up a bit." Just math.
Marco had been tuning engines for fifteen years. He could read spark plugs like tea leaves and diagnose a misfire by the way the exhaust crackled at idle. But one humid Tuesday afternoon, a 1967 Mustang—restored to factory perfection—broke him.
That night, Marco researched EFI Analytics. The company was born from the open-source MegaSquirt community, where DIY tuners realized that standalone ECUs generate mountains of data—but humans can't process mountains. So EFI Analytics built tools to turn those mountains into molehills: for datalog analysis, TunerStudio for real-time tuning, and later, advanced features like AutoTune (which literally drives the car for you, adjusting fuel tables on the fly).
The software didn't just show him the data. It interpreted it. A box popped up: "Detected AE (Acceleration Enrichment) insufficient during hot restart transient. Recommend increasing Warmup Enrichment taper by 12% between 160-180°F."
Reluctantly, Marco plugged in the USB cable. The tuning software looked familiar—Holley’s interface—but the real tool he opened was something called , a program made by a company named EFI Analytics .
Three months later, Marco tuned a twin-turbo LS-swapped BMW that three other shops had failed to get running right. Using , he drove the car for 20 minutes while the software adjusted the fuel map in real-time. The owner's face when he saw the smooth idle and perfect part-throttle cruise? Priceless.
Efianalytics [updated] May 2026
What made them different? Most tuning software shows you what the sensors are doing. EFI Analytics shows you what to do about it . Their algorithms compare your actual air/fuel ratios against your target tables, then highlight the exact cells that need correction. No guessing. No "richen it up a bit." Just math.
Marco had been tuning engines for fifteen years. He could read spark plugs like tea leaves and diagnose a misfire by the way the exhaust crackled at idle. But one humid Tuesday afternoon, a 1967 Mustang—restored to factory perfection—broke him. efianalytics
That night, Marco researched EFI Analytics. The company was born from the open-source MegaSquirt community, where DIY tuners realized that standalone ECUs generate mountains of data—but humans can't process mountains. So EFI Analytics built tools to turn those mountains into molehills: for datalog analysis, TunerStudio for real-time tuning, and later, advanced features like AutoTune (which literally drives the car for you, adjusting fuel tables on the fly). What made them different
The software didn't just show him the data. It interpreted it. A box popped up: "Detected AE (Acceleration Enrichment) insufficient during hot restart transient. Recommend increasing Warmup Enrichment taper by 12% between 160-180°F." Their algorithms compare your actual air/fuel ratios against
Reluctantly, Marco plugged in the USB cable. The tuning software looked familiar—Holley’s interface—but the real tool he opened was something called , a program made by a company named EFI Analytics .
Three months later, Marco tuned a twin-turbo LS-swapped BMW that three other shops had failed to get running right. Using , he drove the car for 20 minutes while the software adjusted the fuel map in real-time. The owner's face when he saw the smooth idle and perfect part-throttle cruise? Priceless.