Im gonna have to jump in on this, as I myself had an issue thursday at Bradenton.
First of all these cars DO NOT run closed loop all the time.
Second, It is possible to run them OPEN LOOP all the time.
Now, I roached a piston, maybe two on the dyno before we left for FL.... and here is the story.
As i was tuning our car in 2# increments up to @12 # EVERYTHING was spot on. Developed a bunch of tune files in the process both race gas and pump gas @ lower power levels.
Once I was happy with the 12# race gas file, I started to bump up the boost, Starting with 14#. Because I was completely comfortable with my a/f on the 20 or so pulls i was a little laxxed on watching the a/f monitor, no longer "hawkeyed" on the a/f gauge, but a bit more focused on the boost level.
Let me just say, Shame on me! COMMANDED A/F shifted to 1.0 lambda (14.6:1) at 4400 rpm, which happens to be at peak torque (660lbft), I missed the shift in a/f for nearly 1 second, at which time the damage was done.
So why did commanded lambda shift to 1.0? Well it seems that the ecm will do whatever it takes to control torque. The added 2 psi and ignition timing caused the engine to exceed a few of the torque values in the tune. Appearantly Ford thought it was a great idea to cut fuel as well as a few other things to limit the engines torque. Needless to say, not a good thing for a turbocharged/supercharged 5.0........
After a breif discussion with a few other folks this is a relatively common issue, and has been realized before, but not mentioned.....
So if youre a tuner and were unaware, or a customer that thinks he is going to just bump up the boost by a pulley change or a turn on the boost controller TAKE NOTE!
Sorry about the 02 harness, that sucks. Sounds as though Bradenton was hard on a few 5.0 cars!