PRG3k
Well-Known Member
Quite a bit later. Stock location turbo that spools like a big turbo.I know the 7163 is the spool king. What rpm is the Vargas Stage 2 turbo spooling?
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Quite a bit later. Stock location turbo that spools like a big turbo.I know the 7163 is the spool king. What rpm is the Vargas Stage 2 turbo spooling?
Drop me an email [email protected] to discuss your upgrade path.Yes sir! I want more power period LOL. Now Adam I just bought the Cobb shelf tune today and had it installed. My intentions are to get the levels IC-----> Adam Tune ;-) --------> full exhaust--------> Adam tune . in between each purchase will be spark plugs, catch can, waste gate. Any recommendations on a down pipe and what's the real deal on cat vs catless? I was thinking of going full borla atak with their downpipe or even a downpipe (CPE, kooks, stainless works, Borla) with a flow master y pipe and Borla atak axel back. As far as adding a turbo after these mods I think for me personally the borgwarner turbo sounds exactly the kind of turbo I'd want.
All data I have is on the same style dyno (424x) with no load, same corrections. Variants have been limited to as little as possible.So all of this data was collected on a 24" Dynojet? Did you also use an eddy current and road load data or was this run in inertial only mode? There can be a significant difference in the results with turbocharged cars...
Samezies.looking forward to your EFR7670 numbers![]()
So you're saying that the load applied to the car/engine is the same on an unloaded 424x as it is on the street where you can have different inertia, mass, grade, tire rolling resistance (road surface), and aerodynamic drag that increases geometrically with speed? I'm not sure that matches what I've seen over the years.All data I have is on the same style dyno (424x) with no load, same corrections. Variants have been limited to as little as possible.
I have road data to compare as well just to make sure everything is close to comparing apples to apples as possible.
No, I didn't say that. Nor would I ever, however you will be VERY surprised to compare load on these cars on the street versus a 424x. Load is almost identical but you don't account for frontal area, drag, resistance.So you're saying that the load applied to the car/engine is the same on an unloaded 424x as it is on the street where you can have different inertia, mass, grade, tire rolling resistance (road surface), and aerodynamic drag that increases geometrically with speed? I'm not sure that matches what I've seen over the years.
I think you're starting to see my point. It's quite possible that your dyno results would not correlate with what a user may see with their actual car on the street. So, saying that Turbo A spools faster that Turbo B on the dyno in an unloaded condition doesn't necessarily mean that the same will be true for them when they actually drive in traffic.I'm talking about apples to apples ON THE DYNO.
The car on the street will obviously perform differently, not to mention when are you going to be driving on the street and think that doing a 4th gear pull from 2,000rpms is going to be the best choice for optimal performance.
It is actually instructed heavily to NOT lay into throttle in higher gears when at low speed. This has been the fate of many engines. With bigger turbo cars it really isn't a matter, however I'm not talking about daily driving in my reply I was simply speaking on optimum performance, you wouldn't be in 4th gear at 2,000rpms if you were say do a quick roll race with someone at 40mph.I think you're starting to see my point. It's quite possible that your dyno results would not correlate with what a user may see with their actual car on the street. So, saying that Turbo A spools faster that Turbo B on the dyno in an unloaded condition doesn't necessarily mean that the same will be true for them when they actually drive in traffic.
On the other end of the performance spectrum, I have a twin turbo 6.2L that shows identical boost response between an MD-1100 and the street/track, but loses 2PSI (out of 6 total) and 50rwhp when run on an unloaded Dynojet 248 because the unloaded dyno didn't cause the turbos to spool. No changes in hardware, conditions, or calibration between the runs.
Tipping into boost at 2000rpm happens more often than you think. Driving in traffic, this is a pretty regular event, and part of what OEM calibrators critique in their drive quality exercises. It's also a big reason why Ford picked what looks like a small-ish turbo for this application. They want boost response at lower RPM so that they can build torque without requiring a downshift and make the engine feel much bigger than 2.3L to the customer.
I don't have a dog in this fight either. I don't sell turbos or end-user ECU calibrations. I'm just trying to help consumers become educated about how they evaluate performance parts data.
Greg, nice to see you on here. It was SEMA 2008 maybe when you JimC and myself went out for dinner and other shens with the sweet rental convertible Mustang.I think you're starting to see my point. It's quite possible that your dyno results would not correlate with what a user may see with their actual car on the street. So, saying that Turbo A spools faster that Turbo B on the dyno in an unloaded condition doesn't necessarily mean that the same will be true for them when they actually drive in traffic.
On the other end of the performance spectrum, I have a twin turbo 6.2L that shows identical boost response between an MD-1100 and the street/track, but loses 2PSI (out of 6 total) and 50rwhp when run on an unloaded Dynojet 248 because the unloaded dyno didn't cause the turbos to spool. No changes in hardware, conditions, or calibration between the runs.
Tipping into boost at 2000rpm happens more often than you think. Driving in traffic, this is a pretty regular event, and part of what OEM calibrators critique in their drive quality exercises. It's also a big reason why Ford picked what looks like a small-ish turbo for this application. They want boost response at lower RPM so that they can build torque without requiring a downshift and make the engine feel much bigger than 2.3L to the customer.
I don't have a dog in this fight either. I don't sell turbos or end-user ECU calibrations. I'm just trying to help consumers become educated about how they evaluate performance parts data.
Strong first post.So all of this data was collected on a 24" Dynojet? Did you also use an eddy current and road load data or was this run in inertial only mode? There can be a significant difference in the results with turbocharged cars...
Damn.. I have read your articles and have both of your books. Helped a ton in learning how to Tune My Camaro with HP tuners. :hail:So all of this data was collected on a 24" Dynojet? Did you also use an eddy current and road load data or was this run in inertial only mode? There can be a significant difference in the results with turbocharged cars...