neodark
Left 4cyl @home
haha, yes :lol:Well let's see, my bolt on GT ran low 11's. Does your 4-banger do that?:shrug:
Exactly
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haha, yes :lol:Well let's see, my bolt on GT ran low 11's. Does your 4-banger do that?:shrug:
Exactly
LOL!! My friends 2014 5.0 run about mid 11's with tune and bolt-ons with no stress on the engine!I wouldnt take what these GT guys say to heart, they are a little touchy about our I-4. Considering some of them get beat by a modified Eco unless they are willing to add force induction.
awfully sensitive this morning. I do find it interesting that yall GT fellas find your way into the eco section but only comment on blown ecoboost threads with comments involving insult to injury, but never seem to comment on threads like UPR Steve wiggling his way into the 9's. curious how that worksWell let's see, my bolt on GT ran low 11's. Does your 4-banger do that?:shrug:
Exactly
Well isn't this the sad truth. Brings a whole new meaning to "Kick em while they are down."awfully sensitive this morning. I do find it interesting that yall GT fellas find your way into the eco section but only comment on blown ecoboost threads with comments involving insult to injury, but never seem to comment on threads like UPR Steve wiggling his way into the 9's. curious how that works
How many miles did you have on that car with the LMS 93 and did you have any cold weather issues? Obviously you didn't blow the engine, but even LMS has had periodic minor issues with a few of their SHO tunes in the past when they first got into EB's.Agreed - and I had a pretty decent tune on my last car (Taurus SHO, Livernois 93octane tune) and would NOT have expected Ford to replace the motor if it grenaded. Tunes are GREAT but you have to understand the risk and not whine when the manufacturer denies a claim.
They're right, though. Sorry.awfully sensitive this morning. I do find it interesting that yall GT fellas find your way into the eco section but only comment on blown ecoboost threads with comments involving insult to injury, but never seem to comment on threads like UPR Steve wiggling his way into the 9's. curious how that works
This ^^^. There's pros and cons to both, even the V6 has its advantages. Simply put a FI V6 will make more power on pump gas than a FI I4. A FI V8 will make more power on pump gas than a FI V6 or FI I4....Well isn't this the sad truth. Brings a whole new meaning to "Kick em while they are down."
Excellent points man, you nailed it. Yes I always wanted the V8 and that's because I'm fine with the power in stock form. Once I get the car, I can't tune it or do anything crazy since I have no cash cover repairs on my dime.This ^^^. There's pros and cons to both, even the V6 has its advantages. Simply put a FI V6 will make more power on pump gas than a FI I4. A FI V8 will make more power on pump gas than a FI V6 or FI I4....
What it comes down to is COST. The Ecobost stangs represnt the best bang for buck to a point. For just $1300 you can run a good quality tune, FMIC and 160F thermostat on an otherwise stock car and compete with stock NA V8's that cost 7k more just to get into and get markedly lower fuel mileage coupled with poorer handling (due to weight).
The down side is the max potential is lower and reliability will suffer at power levels modified V8's can make without breaking a sweat, lets face it, with the 5.0 you have 2x the cylinders and more than double the total displacement.
There is NO replacement for Displacement (Just look at GM's 6 liter in the 2016 Camaro, runs a 12.3 stock...sure a tuned NA V8 can do that, but not stock, but the GM power plant has 20% more displacement).
In the street car, autocross and circuit track category a lightly modified EB does exceptionally well at its price point for very little put into it cost wise, but again there are risks and a blown engine is one of them if care is not taken to choose a tune with proper engine management schemes and address the additional cooling needed to ensure longer term reliability. The more power you push, the more likely a catastrophic failure. The trick is to balance power with reliability.
The whole reason I focused on cooling upgrades first was reliability. I upgraded to a 2" mishomoto radiator, 160F thermostat and large FMIC to aid the LMS 93 tune in making safe power. Even despite all that there is some risk assumed even if law prohibits the Mfg. from blaming the modifications without proving them to be the cause of the failure. Testing is important, but if the test doesn't account for ALL possible conditions, once you reach a condition outside of the test, you can run into problems.
Lesson here is, if you get a shop tune, make sure you get it tuned during winter or re-tune during winter to make safe power. The other option is to find an OE like tune like Ford Performance or LMS which also have already tested to cold weather operation (but you will not make quite as much power as a shop tune due to the added safety margin to account for environment and individual car differences).
Notice the previous person said "some of them" certainly not all GTs, but there are numerous ecoboosts running low 11's.Well let's see, my bolt on GT ran low 11's. Does your 4-banger do that?:shrug:
Exactly
Well Dirty-EB-Chicago was the 1st to bring up the Ecoboost beating a GT. Not me. All I did was comment on the warranty aspect.Notice the previous person said "some of them" certainly not all GTs, but there are numerous ecoboosts running low 11's.
You just further proved his point regarding GT owners, cool your car ran low 11's, but mine costed less. Both engines have their pros and cons. Both engines are fantastic platforms, not sure why we cant just all get along? :shrug:
Me too, I've always loved the V8 sound and pull, there's just nothing like it. In fact I'll bet every EB owner on here would trade their EB, even modified for a GT350 of given the opportunity.Excellent points man, you nailed it. Yes I always wanted the V8 and that's because I'm fine with the power in stock form. Once I get the car, I can't tune it or do anything crazy since I have no cash cover repairs on my dime.
Bang for you buck, the EB Mustang wins.. Like the above mentioned, with $1300 it can pretty much get to a stock GT level and might even feel quicker from stoplight to stoplight.
If one wants to remain stock or do mods that doesn't mess with the warranty, then yes.. There's no replacement for displacement.
Asking someone if his "4-banger" is a low 11's car has NOTHING to do with commenting on the warranty aspect.Well Dirty-EB-Chicago was the 1st to bring up the Ecoboost beating a GT. Not me. All I did was comment on the warranty aspect.
And just a little helpful hint. "Costed" is not a word.;)