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ITB's on a 24v project, Dyno results Post 136!!!

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    Originally posted by Wanganstyle View Post
    A supra mk4 has a 60 mm throttle; it's ok for a 600rwhp.
    That's with boost and is not relevant to a discussion of N/A engines.

    Originally posted by Wanganstyle View Post
    How can one cylinder alone pull more than 36mm worth of throttle?
    Because the intake valve is only open ~1/3 of the cycle time. With 33% duty cycle, the peak flow while the intake valve is open is MORE THAN THREE TIMES the average flow.

    The throttle on a plenum manifold only sees average flow.

    850-1000 CFM worth of carbeuration on a 350 Chevy is decent for a single 4 barrel. However, if you run Webers, you'll need a total of more than 3000 CFM on top of the same engine.

    Comment


      Originally posted by The Dark Side of Will View Post
      Are you seeing a rich spike or a lean spike?
      Well, seeing the maps are calibrated to a plenum that has limited available air, I would gather it's a lean spike. Lean spikes are common, even with stock configurations, just as rich is when the throttle is snapped on way or other, but the ECU isn't compensating for this much air fast enough. All the values will have to be moves closer to the bottom left of the tables.

      Trying to work on this project in between other things going on around the shop. Might have time to get a WB installed today, was hoping the stock maps were close enough to go directly to the dyno, but don't want to waste rental time tuning diveability and part throttle on the rollers. Only have it running and moving under it's own power as of yet. The problem was less amplified prior to the IAC and vacuum block being installed, seems the IAC response is too slow with abrupt throttle changes.
      john@m20guru.com
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        its deceptive to gauge improvements with ITB as you get so much response when you crack the throttle that it is often perceived as a big improvement when infact it can often be a little gain, small gain or no gain at WOT it just depends. in addition to this the part throttle will be better because the cross talking is almost completely eliminated and in some cases the engine will make highest torque at low rpm with less that 100% throttle particularity with big throttles, camshafts and exhaust tuning that isn't complementary to low rpm.

        the dyno and only the will tell the story if there is a proper comparable baseline with which to compare to.

        one thing for sure is the tunability and driveability of an ITB is far superior to a single common plenum on a inline 6 and IMO worth it alone.
        89 E30 325is Lachs Silber - currently M20B31, M20B33 in the works, stroked to the hilt...

        new build thread http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=317505

        Comment


          Right, but useable power under the curve should always be the target. If peak power is similar in two engines, the one with more area under the graph will always outperform.

          As Rama has shown us, peak power still can be gained in a proper design, but unless it's an engine operating in a very narrow band of engine speed, peak gains is not always the best.
          john@m20guru.com
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            Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View Post
            Right, but useable power under the curve should always be the target. If peak power is similar in two engines, the one with more area under the graph will always outperform.

            As Rama has shown us, peak power still can be gained in a proper design, but unless it's an engine operating in a very narrow band of engine speed, peak gains is not always the best.
            yeah i didnt mean they cant provide peak gains at all, merely that seat of the pants is not a good judge. the number of times ive been proven wrong by the dyno is alot and usually in a bad way ;)
            89 E30 325is Lachs Silber - currently M20B31, M20B33 in the works, stroked to the hilt...

            new build thread http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=317505

            Comment


              Right, and on the flip side, peak gains is often all people look at. ;)

              Just like a comment on a before/after dyno from a chip we wrote. Comments were of the like "only three WHP?!?!?", but they weren't looking at the places we gain 15+ WHP.

              I know the response can be misleading. That's why we test everything we do.
              john@m20guru.com
              Links:
              Transaction feedback: Here, here and here. Thanks :D

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                Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View Post
                Right, and on the flip side, peak gains is often all people look at. ;)

                Just like a comment on a before/after dyno from a chip we wrote. Comments were of the like "only three WHP?!?!?", but they weren't looking at the places we gain 15+ WHP.

                I know the response can be misleading. That's why we test everything we do.
                ive done a fair bit of testing on my m20 of late with 42 itb and im still sorting things out and will do a write up oneday in a suitable thread

                you can also have no extra peak torque or peak power but have a faster car if the power curve does not fall off the cliff as fast allowing more useable rpms but this is lost among alot of people
                89 E30 325is Lachs Silber - currently M20B31, M20B33 in the works, stroked to the hilt...

                new build thread http://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showthread.php?t=317505

                Comment


                  Individual throttles on a performance engine are wonderful, hands down.
                  Lorin


                  Originally posted by slammin.e28
                  The M30 is God's engine.

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View Post
                    Well, seeing the maps are calibrated to a plenum that has limited available air, I would gather it's a lean spike. Lean spikes are common, even with stock configurations, just as rich is when the throttle is snapped on way or other, but the ECU isn't compensating for this much air fast enough. All the values will have to be moves closer to the bottom left of the tables.

                    Trying to work on this project in between other things going on around the shop. Might have time to get a WB installed today, was hoping the stock maps were close enough to go directly to the dyno, but don't want to waste rental time tuning diveability and part throttle on the rollers. Only have it running and moving under it's own power as of yet. The problem was less amplified prior to the IAC and vacuum block being installed, seems the IAC response is too slow with abrupt throttle changes.
                    IAC mapping+itb is a pain in the ass to program; are you using the standard 3 wire IAC unit or a 2 wire one?

                    Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I337 using Tapatalk
                    OBD1 M54/M52TU swap as a M50b25

                    Z4 non powered steering rack fits e30



                    Euro e46 2005/6 320d 6mt gearbox into E30 with M20 hardy and beck 1985 327s engine

                    Comment


                      Using the stock IAC plumbed into the vacuum block.
                      john@m20guru.com
                      Links:
                      Transaction feedback: Here, here and here. Thanks :D

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                        Originally posted by ForcedFirebird View Post
                        Well, seeing the maps are calibrated to a plenum that has limited available air, I would gather it's a lean spike. Lean spikes are common, even with stock configurations, just as rich is when the throttle is snapped on way or other, but the ECU isn't compensating for this much air fast enough. All the values will have to be moves closer to the bottom left of the tables.
                        I'm not sure how to evaluate the accel enrichment curve in a purely MAF engine management.

                        In a MAP based engine management, the manifold starts off at low pressure behind a close throttle. The throttle snaps open and air starts to flow before pressure builds in the manifold. So the AE curve needs to add fuel over a particular time interval until pressure in the plenum comes up to the point at which the MAP sensor registers the increased load on the engine. At that point, AE fuel tapers out while fuel calculated from engine load calculated from MAP reading tapers in.

                        So with a TPC system, the volume is smaller and the throttle area is larger, so the pressure behind the throttles comes up more rapidly. This means that the AE from the plenum manifold results in a rich spike when used on a TPC system, as the AE fuel hasn't tapered out before the MAP reading comes up and adds more fuel.

                        Without high end analytical tools, the only way to tune AE is empirically... dyno or street time.

                        Comment


                          This is relevant to my interests :)
                          Simon
                          Current Cars:
                          -1999 996.1 911 4/98 3.8L 6-Speed, 21st Century Beetle

                          Make R3V Great Again -2020

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                            Not sure the OEM mounts are happy, but quick vid during a tuning session...

                            john@m20guru.com
                            Links:
                            Transaction feedback: Here, here and here. Thanks :D

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                              Take my Money NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I need this more than my Wife

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by The Dark Side of Will View Post

                                Without high end analytical tools, the only way to tune AE is empirically... dyno or street time.
                                Wideband says it's very lean except WOT. ;)
                                john@m20guru.com
                                Links:
                                Transaction feedback: Here, here and here. Thanks :D

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