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| Engine, Exhaust, Transmission Discuss the FR-S | 86 | BRZ engine, exhaust and drivetrain. |
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#15 |
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I am in a development program with regards to a flywheel development. Currently the light weight flywheel is installed. All I can say if the light weight flywheel made the engine much more responsive and willing. However the ideling will need to be retune.
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#16 |
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That's awesome. It'll be great to see parts like that hit the market.
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FRS bone stock. Camaro SS LSA forged, stroked, ported, nitrous plate w/standalone, dyno tuned old stock cube numbers: NA-473/437, N20-585/626 at the wheels, 3.90 RPM diff, ACT twin-disk clutch, 18x10 F14's w/NT05R 305/45's, and other supporting mods.
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#17 | |
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There are three factors to increase the power in an engine, increase the area,(bore or stroke), increase the cylinder pressure (forced induction or compression ratio), or increase the speed at which it runs. In this case the joint venture chose to use RPM and compression. For this reason you will never have a neck snapping low end, or midrange without changing volumetric efficiency in that area, or using forced induction. If you use cams to pick up the low end the top end will suffer, and then you will be back on here complaining about how your car doesn't pull hard to redline. I will say that by using a solid 3" intake to the throttle body throttle response was improved noticeably. G |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to jedibow For This Useful Post: | SprayedBigCube (07-09-2012) |
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#18 |
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Tall guys fit, too.
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I'm absolutely in love with the way my throttle responds to the Injen intake strapped to my engine right now. That being said, there is a bit of a dead area in the pedal when you first start to press it down. Moto reviewed a throttle controller that he liked; may have some effect on what you're feeling:
http://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=6482
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#19 |
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form follows function
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ST legal options, give them to me.
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#20 | |
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Thanks for keeping this on track
Don't get me wrong, I may be close to 50 years old and seem like a "domestic" guy, but I did my high school time in Okinawa learning to drive small torqueless Japanese cars of the 70's. I continued that back stateside and until recently always raced 13B RX7's, 4G63 DSM's, and of course, those odd 73 and 74 German Capri's with the 2.0 Pinto engine. In fact because I did so well building powerful 4G63's, a Mustang guy I raced regularly against ended up trading that for a Evo X (and then a year later I ironically got a LS3 Camaro and started modifying that). So I'm no stranger to Japanese imports.All those engines STILL revved better than this stock FA20...until maybe recently: Going on the assumption that Toyota employs some timing retard function or low octane table from knock sensor input and assuming the dealer's "free tank of gas" was 87 and not 93, I disconnected the battery early yesterday morning until lunchtime when the wife wanted to take the FRS for a spin. The motor definitely feels a whole lot more responsive, but I'll reserve judgement for a couple hundred miles. Also, it seems like the oil is a 1/2 quart or more high, so until I pull that out, I'm a bit reluctant to rev this much past 6k. I did order a Perrin crank pulley, but I'm still not so sure how I'm going to sell the wife on the idea of a lightweight flywheel/clutch assembly. I might be able to slip one in when I put a full exhaust on, then just claim preventative maintenance "since the car was in the air" ![]() Quote:
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FRS bone stock. Camaro SS LSA forged, stroked, ported, nitrous plate w/standalone, dyno tuned old stock cube numbers: NA-473/437, N20-585/626 at the wheels, 3.90 RPM diff, ACT twin-disk clutch, 18x10 F14's w/NT05R 305/45's, and other supporting mods.
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#21 | |
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this gives me more time to feel the product at more operation conditions as well as letting the manufacture to have more time to fine tune their product. |
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#22 | |
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keep in mind that the ECU will also need to be retune if the flywheel is changed. if you want a dramatic engine repsonse improvement, you will need a really light flywheel. however, the ECU will need to be retune becuase ideling will be effected. |
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#23 | |
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#24 | |
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G Sorry if this came across wrong another one of those days....
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Last edited by jedibow; 07-09-2012 at 05:15 PM. |
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#25 | |
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AFAIK, the FA20 is internally balanced. While dynamic balance can be affected, I've never had a problem with bearing wear on any of my internally balanced rotating assemblies in other cars. If it were an externally balanced engine, sure, I'd hold up the BS flag. Also, Perrin did inform me that the pulley is good to go as is, no other modifications like lightened flywheel/clutch are required.
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FRS bone stock. Camaro SS LSA forged, stroked, ported, nitrous plate w/standalone, dyno tuned old stock cube numbers: NA-473/437, N20-585/626 at the wheels, 3.90 RPM diff, ACT twin-disk clutch, 18x10 F14's w/NT05R 305/45's, and other supporting mods.
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#26 | |
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#27 | |
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here is what i think its happening. the ECU control the engine performance by adjusting the fuel input and monitor the output shaft RPM. for reach RPM range change, the time duration from one state to another is also tracked. from my understanding, the ECU does not track the actual load output. the data for the fuel map are generated empirically from the running the engine at different throttle condition with OEM components. now a lighter flywheel will give a higher angular acceleration. which means for the same input, the output shaft RPM will be higher with a lighter flywheel. now i will try to describe what ive experience with the light weight flywheel. i will use some fabricated numbers to help the understanding since i cant graph it for you. so lets just say for this car, the idle RPM is at 800 with throttle setting of 8. if we want to increase the RPM to 1K, the throttle setting will be 10, if we want to reduce the RPM to 500, the throttle setting will be 5. in a car, the data in this fuel map are all empirically gather based on OEM hardware. if you want a graph, the X axis will be your RPM, and your Y axis will be your throttle. you can drawing a expediential line and call it your OEM baseline. now with a light flywheel, when your throttle setting is at 8, your actual flywheel RPM will be at 1k because you lessen the rotational mass and inertia. on the same graph, you now will draw a second expediential line from 0, 0 but the line will be to the left of the original OEM baseline. this new line will be your delta, however, this line is unknown to the ECU. now to achieve idle, your ECU is going to give a throttle command of 8, while expecting to get a feedback of 800 RPM. however, the output shaft output shows an RPM of 1K. so the ECU feedback loop now think your actual throttle response is actually at 10, and it compensated by reduce it down to 5 to quickly bring the RPM back down to 800. since the lightweight flywheel dissipate the store energy much faster, at throttle input of 5, the actual RPM is 400 RPM. at that moment, the ECU will recognizes the engine is now too slow, and increase the throttle back to 10 in an attempt to bring up the rpm quickly. this is what i've experience so far with my prototype flywheel. i hope my attempted at discribing what happened makes sense. |
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| The Following User Says Thank You to wu_dot_com For This Useful Post: | Bonburner (07-09-2012) |
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#28 | |
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