N1 ECU
KA24E ECU's
and RB26 ECU's all have the ability to do do calculations and input/outputting.
the stock sr20de/ve ECU's are 8 bit and thus stop all calculating functions at 8012.5 RPM. This has nothing to do with anything else done to the motor, just the fact that the ECU can not calculate any higher than that. As the RPMs increase the The ECU can still trigger the injectors and coils in relation to the speed increase, but can not make adjustments.
First of all all SR ecus VE or DE are 16-bit. That is a fact.
RB26 has both 8-bit(GTR32) and 16-bit ecu versions. All can keep well above 8500rpm.
KA24 I do not know, we do not have them in Europe.
Also I am very curious to know how you found differencies in N1 ecu from other VE ecus except the extra injector drivers.
Here is what happens above 8012.5 rpm.
The ECU is seeing a MAF voltage of say 5.00 volts and has an injector pulse width of say 20ms. The ECU see's this 5.00V MAF signal at 8000rpm, outputs the fuel injector pulse and just thinks it is at 8000rpm. If you rev the motor to 9000rpm, the ECU still thinks you are at 8000rpm even if you are physically at 9000rpm. The ECU just can not calculate above that. So, if your MAF voltage was 5.00V and had a fuel value of x and was doing a 20ms injector pulse, then from 8000-9000rpm, the fuel pulse will get smaller and smaller leaning the motor out because you are taking fuel for 8000rpm and spreading it out. This actually works out great if you peak HP at 8000rpm and then flatline and not building anymore power as you will have a near perfect A/F ratio.
If you rescale the rpm to 9000rpm the ecu will continue to alter the values to limiter.