Secondly, within TunerStudio you can manually calibrate the temp sensor (as well as any other sensor such as intake air temp sensor and wideband o2, etc) using the curve values that have been listed previously for the OEM 944 DME temp sensor as well as listed on Clarks Garage. If you are using a different sensor, youll need to either manually test to get the curve values, or look them up online on the manufacturers website. You basically need 3 values of temperature and resistance in order to map a curve, and you just plug those in as shown (use the dropdown just for "Coolant Temperature Sensor"):

Looking at clarks the Porsche OEM dme temp sensor has the following resistances (you can also test this manually for any sensor using a hot water bath, a meat thermometer, and a multimeter):
59F = 3300 Ohms
86F = 1460 Ohms
176F = ~320 Ohms
Someone listed the BMW 325i DME Temp sensor as the following:
14F = 9300 Ohms
68F = 2500 Ohms
176F = 335 Ohms
Bias resistor value usually always 2490 Ohms
Seems pretty close, so its probably fine, but recommend always use the calibration for the temp sensor installed in the car... I mean why not? You have the porsche OEM sensor values freely available to calibrate off of and you can usually find these curve values for whatever sensor you are running.
Agree with previous comment about fan control. I am running megasquirt and I let the factory relay and system control the fans. No need to have mega/microsquirt handle this unless you have totally removed/stripped the factory wiring. Manually controlling through MS is fine, but if you are only running low fans, it could have implications for the car running hot while in traffic, or running AC (if equipped).
