engineermike
Well-Known Member
The gen3 imrc actually closes off the entire port minus about a 1/4in square hole. You can imagine the velocity is quite high passing through it. The interesting thing is that at 1.1 load, ford is predicting significantly more torque with imrc closed vs open. You’d just never get even close to that though.Then by closing off one intake valve you drastically increase swirl going in to the cylinder and fuel atomization = cleaner burn, mpg increase.
The community needs more self-tuners so we can steepen the learning curve.The more I learn about it, the more I'm leaning towards having a go at the tune myself.
I could go back to 3.8 pulley so I didn't break anything. But I'd like to have a play around with all this and see what I can find.
The ford speed density calculation is a series of calcs and low or high-selects and the resulting curve uses flow as an input and returns map as an output (or vice versa for speed-density systems). It’s basically just a pressure vs flow relationship albeit a super-complicated one. Blowthrough is just one of several curves that are then evaluated and combined into a final curve. All that to say that there is no extrapolation needed because the blowthrough slope is the curve and flow is it the input. Speed density is one of those things that’s defined by a quadratic equation rather than a table of data. You tune the quadratic coefficients but for blowthrough only slope is used. That said, the Roush blowthrough tuning is most likely tuned for the stock exhaust and high backpressure that would appear to prevent most blowthrough, so may not do us much good.Mike, the data from the roush blow through logic, could this be extrapolated per psi of boost and used on a centrif setup?
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