
The primary reason for the autotune is to continually adjust the parameters of the bike relative to air tem, humidity, altitude variations in altitude and variations in grades of gasoline. I had the SSERT on my 07 and the bike ran great in San Antonio and terrible on my yearly trip for 14 days in the Pacific mountains. If the high altitude was above 85 the bike pinged like crazy and had no power (and ran very hot). Lower grade gasoline didn't help and I even had to use Octane Boost.
Any way, after many trips (at the dealerships cost) to "tune the bike", I bought the TMAT from Zippers and for the next 20,000 miles the bike didn't care where I was or the conditions. It ran great.
That said, when I got the 09 it was very hot in March, it came with the SSERT (and a tune) and I decided to change it out to a wide band system. TMAT wasn't available and thus I went with the PC V with autotune. This bike has over 12,000 on the PC V with auto and I have had absolutely no issues at all. It will easily outrun my stock CVO buddies. Only one TTS in my area on a 96 ci. So it's not a fair comparison. I haven't had it tuned at all,just a good base map from Fuel Moto and the autotune took over. I have ridden the 09 in 8500 in snow and dropped down into the desert at over 95 with no issues at all in the same day (eastern Arizone on 191). Cold, hot high altitude, low humidity high humidity, bikes runs great. I get better gas mileage and have more power than my CVO buddies (except for the two that went with the PC V also).
I like a closed loop system and that is what I get.
That said the TTS is a good choice also. But if you need to cool the bike down you have to set the AFR outside the NB sensors range and run the bike in an open loop mode. As you can tell on this site, the TTS is very popular and performs well.
