5Mad
Member
- Thread starter
- #16
Looking forward to see your "blown engine" thread soon... sorry I had to say it ;) Running these engines modded with 87 is just asking for trouble and really doesnt make sense.
Used to work with a bunch of engineers. The "dire consequences" thing got old fast. Told them I was more likely to see a Dire Wolf. If an air cleaner, intercooler, and plugs blow an engine Ford has much bigger problems.
Stantz: Fire and brimstone coming down from the skies! Rivers and seas boiling!
Spengler: Forty years of darkness! Earthquakes, volcanoes!
Zeddemore: The dead rising from the grave!
Venkman: Human sacrifice! Dogs and cats living together! Mass hysteria!
I'm a patient person. I was waiting for the initial responses to complete. While that was happening I was reflecting on what jbailer had contributed. I checked the "you do not need a tune for FP cold air intake" claim he made. Mishimoto has a "technical report" on their CAI and it agrees with him. After giving that some thought it made sense. The air goes into the CAI and then the turbo adds air/pressure downstream. Ford would have to measure it after the turbo addition as checking before that wouldn't be useful on a turbo. So that made a lot of sense - he was insightful on that.Yo OP are you going to start a thread and not participate ?
More wisdom. Not being sarcastic.Yes, with unleashed you have to flash to the tune you want, whether to 87, 91 or 93, but you don't have to flash to stock to switch between tunes though, you can flash between the different octanes without needing to flash to stock.
The actual flash takes around 10 mins, not really sure that long, considering OP just wants to tune and leave it at 87. I use the 93 for summer and 91 for winter, haven't used the 87 so I can't tell you have much or a gain it is, but both the 91 and 93 have noticeable gains.
Also I would agree with @solodogg that on 93 is where most of the gains happen with this engine, but it's his money and car, he can do as he pleases.
Thank you all. I've read your responses and I'm forming the opinion that the aftermarket tuners are really for people that want to "play" with the settings long-term. People who intend to keep at it. Tinker with them as they should be. That said I'd be happy if the little toggle switch below the radio, that "normal, sport, etc.," thing could have 87 octane for normal and then a 93 tune when I flip it to sport. Just that. That would be perfect.
I'm still stewing it.
Plugs. Advise was plug swap isn't really needed for the limited changes I'm looking at. I'll take that advice.
Tune. Ford tune is getting consensus. I'll likely go with that after confirming with them that 87 octane won't make it force oceans to boil, brimstone to come down from the sky, and dogs slapping people world-wide.
CAI. Ford performance. Less expensive than Roush.
Intercooler. I already picked one.
Thank you all.
Ford designed the cars to be able to use 87 octane. Ford engineers. I'm aware that they perform better on better quality gas. My Lincoln requires 91+. I've been running it on 87. It's a 2003 with the V-8. That makes 14 years now on 87. The sky was up there this morning and the Lincoln runs fine. Knocks if you really nail it on 87, that isn't good, but I know that and don't hit it hard. If I wanted to hit it hard I'd put 93 in and run a tank first.
Thanks again.
Sponsored
