17 July 2026 · Sam de Jong
What Is an EMM and How Does It Control Your Engine's HP?
The EMM is the electronic brain of your Evinrude E-TEC, and your engine's horsepower rating lives in its software. Here is what that means for a reflash.
If you run an Evinrude E-TEC, the single most important part you never see is the EMM. It sits quietly on the powerhead, but every combustion event on your engine passes through it first. Understanding what it does explains something that surprises most owners: your engine's horsepower rating is not built into the metal. It is written in software. That one fact is the whole reason a reflash can unlock more power on a block that is already capable of it.
What EMM stands for and what it actually does
EMM stands for Engine Management Module. It is the electronic brain of the E-TEC. Where an older outboard used mechanical linkages, carburettors and a fixed timing curve, the E-TEC hands all of that to the EMM. On every stroke it decides how much fuel to inject, when to fire the spark, and how to keep the engine running cleanly across the whole range from idle to wide open throttle.
To make those decisions the EMM follows a calibration, also called a software map. The map is a set of tables and rules that tell the module how the engine should behave under every load and RPM condition. It controls the fuel injection, the ignition timing, the injectors themselves and the overall running of the engine. Change the map and you change how the engine behaves, without touching a single mechanical part.
The key insight: the HP rating lives in the software
Here is the part that matters for power. Evinrude did not build a separate engine for every horsepower number in the brochure. They used shared engine blocks across several ratings and set the actual rating in the EMM software. The same casting, the same pistons and the same injectors could leave the factory as a lower-rated engine or a higher-rated one. What separated them was the calibration loaded into the module.
That is why identical hardware can carry different HP ratings. And it is why a reflash works. When a block is software-limited below what its own hardware already runs from the factory, we can load the higher factory rating that the identical block is designed for. There are no hardware changes for most steps. A water valve is only needed on certain steps, such as the 40 to 60 HP jump. The power you gain is real rated power, not a display number or a cosmetic sticker change.
A concrete example: the 75 and 90 HP big block
The clearest case is the 75 and 90 HP big block. It is the same block that Evinrude built and sold as both a 75 HP and a 90 HP engine. Same block, two ratings, set in software. You can confirm the block by the EMM part number printed on the EMM label, which identifies the casting and decides whether an engine is eligible for a tune. On this block the part numbers are 586320, 586321 and 5008557. If your label matches, your 75 HP engine is running the exact hardware that leaves the factory as a 90. You can read the full path for this engine on the 75 to 90 HP tuning page.
Where the EDF fits in
The HP map is not the only thing the module carries. The EMM also stores an EDF, the Engine Data File. The EDF holds engine specific data such as injector coefficients and the oil type your engine expects. It is separate from the HP map, but it is part of how the EMM is programmed, and it is one of the reasons a proper reflash respects the individual engine rather than flashing a generic image over the top. If you want the detail, we cover it in our guide to the EDF file.
What a reflash means in practice
Because the rating lives in software, changing it is a software job. The tune is:
- Plug and play. No parts swap for the common steps, so the engine runs the higher rating straight away.
- Real rated power. The engine actually produces the higher figure, it does not just report it.
You do not have to ship the whole engine to get this done. We can reflash remotely, so the EMM never leaves the boat, or you can send the module to us by mail. The fixed prices, excluding VAT, are:
| Remote reflash | 199 euro |
| Remote reflash plus our bootstrap and diagnostic cable kit | 275 euro |
| Mail-in reflash | 199 euro |
We work from Nieuwkuijk in the Netherlands and serve owners worldwide by DHL Express. We have tuned over 100 EMMs to date, so the process on these engines is well understood.
Check your engine
The EMM is the brain, the map is the rating, and on a shared block that rating is a setting we can change. The best next step is to find your EMM part number and see which step your engine is eligible for. Start on the EMM tuning hub, match your part number, and get a reflash that gives you the horsepower your block was already built to run.