lisandra
mama smurf
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I would imagine so, that may be what the "high flow" catted down pipes are using. However most after market down pipes, catted or not, require custom PCM software. The stock unit does not and the power gains are not large. The factory DP is reasonably well tuned for he stock turbo size and there are tones of cars putting out 350 to 375 wtq. On stock rods, pistons and crank we can't really go much beyond that without eating into the safety margin as the factory internals start to fail at about 425 wtq and 350 whp.What about the aftermarket metal substrate or "spun metallic" performance catalytic converters - how to those fare in plead of the ever so common ceramic cats?
Wouldn't the EB benefit from that type of metallic cat over ceramic (excluding the option to go totally catless).
On the ebm it sucks. So far even the most craptacular dp has shown a lot of gains without tune and massive gains with it torque wiseI would imagine so, that may be what the "high flow" catted down pipes are using. However most after market down pipes, catted or not, require custom PCM software. The stock unit does not and the power gains are not large. The factory DP is reasonably well tuned for he stock turbo size and there are tones of cars putting out 350 to 375 wtq. On stock rods, pistons and crank we can't really go much beyond that without eating into the safety margin as the factory internals start to fail at about 425 wtq and 350 whp.
So if you want backwards comparability with the factory software and aren't going for broke then I don't think it's a good path to go, an IC would or tune would provide far more power and consistency. IC's will produce around 20 to 30 hp in the upper range and allow you to make that power run after run vs. the 15hp or so of a down pipe. Now if your going with a big turbo and getting more involved with mods than what the scope of this thread is for, then by all means it makes sense and the gains will be much bigger. The goal of this thread was the most critical mods to 1. allow the engine to make consistent power and 2. allow the engine to make more power without sacrificing reliability or adding substantial risk.
Also, just an FYI, I did contact LMS regarding the catalyst temperature issue to see if they are aware of any problems. I associated lifting the power band in the upper rpm range (aka holding a linear torque slope vs a decreasing torque slope) with automatically high catalyst temperatures. LMS claims none of their software causes those conditions as they do not exceed any factory specific limits on engine components.
We also know that Ford Racing also stays within those limits, so that is two. There are likely others well, however it would be very wise to investigate the issue before you go down a particular upgrade path. Ford Racing and LMS are known safe paths regarding the stock catalyst, if anyone gets any information on others, feel free to add it to the list of stock cat safe PCM software.
Still waiting for the software release. They said I have a brand new strategy code (probably because I have a May 2016 build) they have not yet seen, so they do not have an off the shelf software build available. What's different in this latest release from Ford vs. say a Jan 2016 build I'm not sure, but usually they have small efficiency tweaks, bug fixes and some times added safety's or adjustments to values etc. which is standard fare from year to year and even month to month in some cases.Have you flashed the LMS tune yet? I'm curious as to your impressions.
That's awesome, I"ll take a look at their stuff, it's good to list everything we can which is geared toward making the most power safely. Balancing drive ability and reliability with performance is the ultimate goal of this thread in case anyone is wondering.[MENTION=25093]TheLion[/MENTION], look up Mountune. They're a performance company, like LMS, that works closely with Ford. A lot of their products and tuning is certified by Ford and warranty approved. I had forgotten about them, but they could potentially be a good option for warranty friendly tuners and products.
The last time I heard, they was working on getting their EBM product line worked out with Ford. That might be something worth looking into as I know this is an immense area of interest for you.
Their tuner, Randy Robles, tuned my 2.0EB Fusion and a lot of friends cars. He's a very knowledge guy and does very good work.
Great, but can you use it with the factory PCM soft ware without causing functional issues? I'm not suggest there aren't performance gains from upgrading the down pipe, there certainly are.I use a Vibrant GESI CAT, more than enough flow for what im doing.
Interesting, I'd like to hear Livernois response on the knocking occurring with the Xv1 tune. I think your probably correct about the Xv1 being a more aggressive variation of the 93 stage 3v7. The question is, how much is going down the 1/4 a bit faster worth to you? Is it worth a blown engine? 10,000 miles less life, 20k, 30k...50k? Your a little more adventurous than me, I would not use the Xv1 if I encountered any knock until I contacted Livernois about it. While the engine can withstand some knock for short periods of time, you still want to avoid it as much as possible as it does add stress.I wasn't told to run it without passengers. Luckily there's a shell station that sells race gas 10 minutes from my house so I reckon I'd try that, check the gap on the plugs and see if the problem persists in a single pull. If it does, I'll run full 93 octane and go back to the V7 tune. The sound I'm hearing is indeed akin to marbles hitting each other very rapidly and only at full throttle. It doesn't happen anytime other than going flat out. I'm gonna try a blend of 93/race gas for a week and see what happens from the increased octane rating.
They also told me that the OEM Motorcraft plugs were fine as that's what's they calibrated the tunes with. I'm still running the MC plugs but I'm pulling them out to check the gapping later tonight. Honestly, the XV1 feels like a more aggressive variation of the V7 to me, and though I've only driven with it for two days, it feels no different driving around town. Throttle response is much more sensitive though.
I'll look into their synthetic coolant for next year as well.
They start failing at 350whp?? From what I've seen more like 450whp is safe. Hell I daily near 380whp on a very early built motor, over 20k miles no issue at all. My race Tune should be 430's maybe more we'll see next month.ive streeted that for a bit as well. Many others pushing well over 400 without issue. Where'd you get 350whp?I would imagine so, that may be what the "high flow" catted down pipes are using. However most after market down pipes, catted or not, require custom PCM software. The stock unit does not and the power gains are not large. The factory DP is reasonably well tuned for he stock turbo size and there are tones of cars putting out 350 to 375 wtq. On stock rods, pistons and crank we can't really go much beyond that without eating into the safety margin as the factory internals start to fail at about 425 wtq and 350 whp.
So if you want backwards comparability with the factory software and aren't going for broke then I don't think it's a good path to go, an IC would or tune would provide far more power and consistency. IC's will produce around 20 to 30 hp in the upper range and allow you to make that power run after run vs. the 15hp or so of a down pipe. Now if your going with a big turbo and getting more involved with mods than what the scope of this thread is for, then by all means it makes sense and the gains will be much bigger. The goal of this thread was the most critical mods to 1. allow the engine to make consistent power and 2. allow the engine to make more power without sacrificing reliability or adding substantial risk.
Also, just an FYI, I did contact LMS regarding the catalyst temperature issue to see if they are aware of any problems. I associated lifting the power band in the upper rpm range (aka holding a linear torque slope vs a decreasing torque slope) with automatically high catalyst temperatures. LMS claims none of their software causes those conditions as they do not exceed any factory specific limits on engine components.
We also know that Ford Racing also stays within those limits, so that is two. There are likely others well, however it would be very wise to investigate the issue before you go down a particular upgrade path. Ford Racing and LMS are known safe paths regarding the stock catalyst, if anyone gets any information on others, feel free to add it to the list of stock cat safe PCM software.