I am not an authority on the Pedal Commander but from the chart showing that the PC only changes the signal going to the ECM; the ECM doesn't know anything more and it opens and closes the throttle body based on its previous programming in the same way that it would if you were at that throttle opening by rotating your hand to that same position as the PC. If you roll into the throttle slowly and have a PC it changes the signal to the ECM to a higher foot pedal or hand rotation reading; resulting in a quicker acceleration based only on advancing the throttle signal nothing else. JMO
Even the Canam ECO, Standard and Sport do not change the HP the ECM adjusts the engine to provide, WOT is WOT in all modes and the PC as well. JMO
Initial WOT is WOT. But the ECU modifies that and will close the throttle bodies when the ryder still has the throttle in the wide open position.
Juuust recalling the graph from BRP that's comparing the throttle response for ECO & Normal Modes in the Spyders, and I'm pretty sure that ECO mode, at least on the Spyders, doesn't ever actually achieve WOT!?! :yikes:
IIRC, I reckon that it never gets that far; the ECO line on the graph was some % lower right from the outset, ending about 30%
less than WOT at full twist, where the 'Normal Mode' actually hit WOT - and then, as Ron has mentioned, the control systems modify the command signal even further and despite the rider continuing to hold WOT (or the about 30% lower equivalent for ECO Mode) on the handgrip, the actual throttle opening is reduced somewhat... In the case of ECO Mode, that reduction is applied
on top of the reduction that selecting ECO Mode already imposes! :banghead:
So it's not true to say "
WOT is WOT in all modes", because you never actually get to WOT in ECO Mode :lecturef_smilie:
And regardless of the Mode selected, even if you continue to hold your hand in the WOT position, the OEM control system will then cut back from/reduce that within moments anyway!

I don't believe that the Power Commander changes any of that at all, nor does it 'reduce the Nanny' or do anything else to the OEM ECU or power output, even tho it
will speed up the initial 'dial in' of your perceived throttle input as your hand twists the throttle... '
Achieving a wider throttle opening for less hand twist' is probably a 'more correct' way of describing what it does, cos it's basically just packing/compressing the former effect of a full hand twist into something less than that...
Mind you, for those saying that the throttle butterfly won't open any quicker than your hand could do it anyway, this Banks Short
seems to show otherwise...
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/bKxgpbp73GI
:dontknow: