Guys, thank you for your time and input so far.
One other variable. the freon was recharged at a DCJR dealership local to them (Satera does not recharge). They only use this dealership, so there is a relationship there and familiarity with getting challengers/chargers/trackhawk builds. The instructions mentioned how much extra freon to add, but most likely that information was not passed on to the dealer. If the dealership overcharged the freon, any chance that could contribute to more drag on the engine when AC comes on? In case relevant, if my in-cabin air was any colder I'd be at risk for frostbite.
@Unholy707 and
@covidcommander got you, makes sense. Yes CC, they are very expensive. And their labor rates went up a few months ago ($190 I believe). You must send your vehicle there for flex fuel (no remote version offered). I don't wanna openly comment on my experience.
Turned the AC on today during a highway drive. first time turning AC on in probably 10 days (of which as mentioned, no stalls during that time). Park to run in to grab something from the store, come back out not more than 1-2 minutes later, start the car, stall x2 immediately after engine turns over (still in park). Have to give immediate throttle to avoid stalling on the 3rd time (in park). This was IMO the known issue of condensation dripping onto cylinder after parking as my IC temps were below dew point while on the highway so I'm sure I was accumulating water on the bricks. I need to ask Satera to add some fuel to the start up table, I believe this typically solves that issue. I have experienced this version of stall several times this summer. To prevent the engine from immediately dying after it cranks on, immediately giving 1-2 part throttles (still in park) seems to keeps the engine running. As far as prevention, as long as I shut the AC off and let the IC coolant temps come up above dew point, then subsequent warm starts and idle are fine (I forgot to do that today, was picking up e98 pails so little bit pre-occupied).
So on that note... I wonder if there is a chance intercooler bricks are accumulating too much condensation while driving around with the chiller/AC. My IC temps consistently drop to 59-60F when regular chiller/cabin mode. I wonder if on days the dew point is above 59-60F, is it possible at low speeds too much condensation is getting into cylinders when my speed slows to 1-9 mph range toward a stop (that is when the stalls happen), and causing the stall? If so, like you guys are saying.. the tune and fueling is insufficient for this scenario. If this is what's happening, I wonder why it doesn't happen to all chiller users given chillers do not require tune changes to safely operate.
Now that I'm 100% confident stalls are somehow related to the chiller being on, will try to correlate the dew point and I/C coolant temps with the low speed stalls. If I can correlate that the low speed stalls happen only when the IC coolant temp dips below the dew point, maybe I need to ask if there is a parameter to add fuel to all relevant tables when the I/C coolant goes below say 65F just to be safe. If I can correlate the dew point theory and replicate with both pump E85 and pump 93, I think that will further support this theory. Still, would be weird that it's only happening to me and not all chiller users.
Of note, still have not uploaded the last tune he sent with the higher idle for AC compressor on.
Welcome any other ideas on sorting through the variables.