MAP and TMAP are the only things directly read by the JB4 from the sensors. Everything else that is logged or displayed is pulled from the OBDII - or guessed.
Remember the JB4 was built to run with *only* the MAP and TMAP connected. Everything else is just a bonus to further tweak its response. I doubt the JB4 reads anything from the wastegate connectors. It also doesn't read anything from the O2 connection. The so-called "
fuel wires" are just a current sink. Based on standard O2 sensor calibration, Burger knows how much current needs to be pulled off that wire to move the reading towards lean by X amount. So the JB4 ADC chip gets set up to pull that much current off that wire. So as far as the ECU is concerned, the sensor's output has moved. But it's really that the JB4 is stealing electrons from the signal wire.
You can check this yourself by having the
fuel wires connected but disconnect the OBDII. The JB4 will still work perfectly fine but it won't display or log any O2 readings.
Burger posted a few years back that he was having trouble getting the gear off the OBDII bus. I seem to remember him saying the usual OBDII PID for gear was either empty or was clearly unusable. That means you're off into OEM custom extensions/protocols, which means you either hack your way through the data or pay to get access to the specs. Burger clearly has little interest in doing that or else we'd be able to use the Kia diagnostics port under the hood. I can't recall the name of the protocol off hand, but that one only has wires for Kia/Hyundai's proprietary protocol - the OBDII wires aren't present in that one. Well, Kia/Hyundai probably has little interest in giving Burger access to the spec.