linnE
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Good to hear but I was not referring to your tunes. I was asking Kingcrab
Yes same day same dyno.
If it is so adaptive (which it is I cant really argue there) then why was power such a difference between Lund and the Bama tune?
If headers wont effect incoming air then why does it change power output and powerband. Granted it is a huge gain but its something. Must be because airflow has changed. A lesser restriction would promote a better incoming flow to a certain degree.
Just curious. Did you work with both tuners using specific PIDs datalogged to build your tune? Or did you just ask for revisions to your tune?
When comparing tunes did you verify each tune to make sure it is safe?
It was on Bama's dyno. When he was done I asked if I could load my Cam tune to see if there was a difference. The point at that time was not to compare to see which made the best power. But it turned out that there was a significant power difference.
And I would hope that both tunes were safe. That would make for shitty business if either one wasn't...
It was on Bama's dyno. When he was done I asked if I could load my Cam tune to see if there was a difference. The point at that time was not to compare to see which made the best power. But it turned out that there was a significant power difference.
And I would hope that both tunes were safe. That would make for shitty business if either one wasn't...
I sent an Email to Mike directly, Told him I got headers and requested some dyno time. He brought me in on a slow day and dyno tuned my car...for free.
To add to that the base pull (email tune) to the final pull (dyno tune) was only a gain of 5-10 hp.
did you know I can make your car show you have 200 more hp than you really do on a dyno?

so where do your headers suck in air that affects your MAF?
You are removing air faster and changing the exit angle and velocityt of the air. You are not affecting the measurement of the air coming in that changes the fueling required. Your car goes into open loop at WOT and follows commanded values for fueling.
Again, there is more than peak power. I can write you a tune file with 13.0+ Air Fuel and crank timing to the point of detonation. It'll run like shit, but she'll get you a pretty dyno sheet for a few pulls.
Maf voltage feedback will change, calibration will not.No one said anything about peak power.
If I put the stock exhaust back on (full stock exhaust) datalogged the MAF then ran my headers and catback Im sure the Maf value will change. Will it be a huge difference probably not but it will change.
did you know I can make your car show you have 200 more hp than you really do on a dyno?
No one said anything about peak power.
If I put the stock exhaust back on (full stock exhaust) datalogged the MAF then ran my headers and catback Im sure the Maf value will change. Will it be a huge difference probably not but it will change.
Yes. Non of the dyno values were changed.
so there were a few pulls done while Mike worked on the tune and go you that 5-10 hp mentioned above? Then you loaded the cammed tune and did the pull? I got that straight ?
post # 175
Maf voltage feedback will change, calibration will not.
This is why there is air metering in the first place.
the amount of air you bring in, does not affect your calibration. This is why we have Mass Air Flow Meters.
The intake tract angle is what determines if you need a new calibration.
Yes, angle and most importantly MAF sample size (maf housing diameter) if using a slot style MAF.the amount of air you bring in, does not affect your calibration. This is why we have Mass Air Flow Meters.
The intake tract angle is what determines if you need a new calibration.
Seer I dont know what you do for a living nor I care honestly, but to look at you boast about your knowledge (which honestly does seem vast, or so it appears atleast to us here on the internet) I hope youre tuning cars or atleast working in the auto industry
It was in response to what you and Seer were talking about...So if the Maf voltage changes than that obviously means headers effect incoming air..Thanks.
I sent an Email to Mike directly, Told him I got headers and requested some dyno time. He brought me in on a slow day and dyno tuned my car...for free.
HUH?
I brought my car in. First pull was the email tune that Mike sent me. He then did a few more pulls while fine tuning the tune. The final pull when tuning was done was only a few HP different the the first pull.
I am saying that his email tune was pretty much spot on.
Then when tuning was done we loaded the Lund tune (i was standing the window of the car while he sat in the driver seat) and did another pull to see what my Cam tune made.
So if the Maf voltage changes than that obviously means headers effect incoming air..Thanks.
....I didnt say anything about the calibration. You said Headers wont effect incoming air. If I put the stock exhaust on my MAF reading Will be different which means incoming air has changed..
Yes, angle and most importantly MAF sample size (maf housing diameter) if using a slot style MAF.
If the engine ingests less air because of a more restrictive exhaust system the MAF voltage feedback will be lower and the PCM will command less fueling.
2 situations that can change this are on alpha-n and speed density cars. Alpha-n for obvious reasons and speed density because volumetric efficiency has changed.
Headers will affect o2 transport delay but that, as Seer mentioned, is an adaptive value and it only affects closed loop. Pre-11s this has no bearing at WOT but 11s stay in closed loop almost all the time however o2 velocity is so quick at WOT transport delay has little to no bearing.
yes, exactly what I said above.I brought my car in. First pull was the email tune that Mike sent me. He then did a few more pulls while fine tuning the tune. The final pull when tuning was done was only a few HP different the the first pull.