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#183 | |
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#184 | |
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I hope that helps, I'm sure more knowledgeable people then me will chime in. |
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#185 | |
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(note - for the other engineers out there, this is a simplified explanation) The (static) frictional force is Force = u * N (where u = static frictional coefficient, N = Normal Force). So the Frictional force (loss) is proportional to the force applied between the two surfaces by the frictional coefficient. For steel, the static frictional force (lubricated and/or 'greasy') is ~0.16. So the frictional force (loss) will always be approximately 0.16 times the force applied. More power from the engine means more force within the trans (gears) but the frictional loss will always be 'in proportion' to the force applied to the mechanism by the frictional coefficient (or about 0.16 = 16%). Since 'rolling' gears are somewhere between static and rolling friction, it is somewhat less than 0.16 or 16%. It is more complicated than that as there are pure roller bearings, sliding bearings, and viscous liquids involved, but that is the basics.
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#186 |
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In short, baseline and tune on same dyno. Otherwise the delta is questionable.
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#187 | |
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#188 | |
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not playing cards
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#189 |
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Imo and from my experience, an otc tune coupled with a good el header will add about 20 horsepower and produce gobs of torque where there was originally none. Makes the car as fast and enjoyable as I could ever want. E85 even better but I wont risk it without a ff setup.
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#190 | |
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This was at an 86 dyno day with 12 86 dynoing the same day, full results in northern California forum. Stock was 136 on same dyno for wheel power. http://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=109320 |
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#191 | |
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...Just add nauseum
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![]() ...Ah, don't be mad, but you're using the wrong equation there. you can't multiply the dependent variable by a percentage to get the starting number. Do the proof, that equation isn't reversible. We aren't calculating a 13 percent increase from 174, we're reversing a 13 percent loss to solve for x. to reverse a 13 percent loss, you would divide the 174.6 by .87, and end up with 200.69 HP, and a reversible, provable equation. Anyway, you're still right about the 200HP thing. More so, in fact. Anyway, I'm not here to argue about dyno settings. The only correct answer to any of that is bring a slip. Show the ET. That'll prove a few things, including whether or not a person has the skill to use any of the power their dyno queen makes.
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#192 | |
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You are of course correct. But I was able to do the calc I provided in my head to see that the numbers did not make sense. Doing it my way was close (enough for sanity check) but not correct. Thanks for the correction.
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#193 | |
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I guess since they tested ALL of the cars with the wrong dyno settings so that makes it OK? The 41 hp drivetrain loss is incorrect, there is no arguing that. (unless you are dragging a dead horse behind the car of course) This is not something the dyno can measure, it is a value the dyno operator has to enter (a priori knowledge) Again, in a stock car we see 174 hp at the wheels (well documented) The hp rating at the crank is 200 hp 200 -174 = 26hp 26/200 = .13 or 13% WHY would that change just by adding a few hp at the crank? Answer - it doesn't. So IF you measured 174.6 at the wheels, you engine has almost exactly the stock hp rating. There is just no way to argue that is not the case (other than 'the dyno guy said so')
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#194 |
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justatroll: "in a stock car we see 174 hp at the wheels (well documented)" it's well documented about THIS, very specific dyno? Don't compare results of different dynos. Just don't.
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#195 | |
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Im not trying to argue anything was simply adding my results to the thread and sharing more results to the op. Take it with a grain of salt, i am in no way a engineer nor an expert at dyno results. My car feels great and the jump to E85 was a noticeable difference in my experience with my car. I honeslty could care less what a dyno says about my car, i love driving it. |
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#196 | |
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I was only using those numbers to calculate drivetrain loss. BUT the drivetrain loss will NOT vary between dynos. 41 hp of drivetrain loss on a engine hp of 216 is 19% loss - this is wrong.
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