WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by Mike-in-Orange
Dyno numbers are great for one thing: comparing before/afters on the same car with the same dyno while adding modifications or doing other tweaks to affect the tune of the engine. Trying to compare Car A/Dyno #1 numbers with Car B/Dyno #2 is almost meaningless. One of the tuner magazines did a great article on this a few years where they took the same vehicle to 7 different dynos on the same day. Not only did they get 7 different numbers, but the difference from hi to low was 54HP!!
Lap times and 1/4 mile ETs with trap speed are a much better indicator of real performance. Nobody ever lost a drag race only to respond "oh yeah, well my car pulled 12HP more than yours on a dyno, so there!" At least, nobody who's taken seriously.
Lap times and 1/4 mile ETs with trap speed are a much better indicator of real performance. Nobody ever lost a drag race only to respond "oh yeah, well my car pulled 12HP more than yours on a dyno, so there!" At least, nobody who's taken seriously.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Dyno's are really only a tuning tool. They should be used for modifying and correcting A/F ratios and tuning. You can check them for performance gains after mods are done but it should be done the same day or on a day with similar temps and humidity otherwise you won't really have correct numbers. Numbers are numbers track times are what really matters, because they tell you what you really have.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by MMZ_TimeLord
So, based on the dyno sheet that looks like mine, with JUST a 20% loss from the drive line, you would have these numbers vs. my stock dyno sheet...
264.9 * 1.25 = 331.125 HP ------------vs. stock----------- 249 * 1.25 = 311.25 HP
294.7 * 1.25 = 368.375 torque --------vs. stock---------- 252 * 1.25 = 315 torque
And that's not even counting the low numbers for the Mustang dyno.
If you factor in the extra 12% for the Mustang dyno loss/low numbers you get
264.9 * 1.470588 = 389.5588 HP ------------vs. stock----------- 249 * 1.470588 = 366.1765 HP
294.7 * 1.470588 = 433.3824 torque --------vs. stock---------- 252 * 1.470588 = 370.5882 torque
So it looks like you aren't getting that bad of numbers after all.
264.9 * 1.25 = 331.125 HP ------------vs. stock----------- 249 * 1.25 = 311.25 HP
294.7 * 1.25 = 368.375 torque --------vs. stock---------- 252 * 1.25 = 315 torque
And that's not even counting the low numbers for the Mustang dyno.
If you factor in the extra 12% for the Mustang dyno loss/low numbers you get
264.9 * 1.470588 = 389.5588 HP ------------vs. stock----------- 249 * 1.470588 = 366.1765 HP
294.7 * 1.470588 = 433.3824 torque --------vs. stock---------- 252 * 1.470588 = 370.5882 torque
So it looks like you aren't getting that bad of numbers after all.
[above edited, looked at notes and had posted wrong machine & #'s forC32 AMG- posted from home, notes at work]
Originally Posted by Bulldogger
Dyno's are really only a tuning tool. They should be used for modifying and correcting A/F ratios and tuning. You can check them for performance gains after mods are done but it should be done the same day or on a day with similar temps and humidity otherwise you won't really have correct numbers. Numbers are numbers track times are what really matters, because they tell you what you really have.
Last edited by Steve Hellums; 05-08-2008 at 02:23 AM.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by MMZ_TimeLord
Steve,
Heres the data I had from my completely stock Mustang dyno runs. NOTE: The dyno was being run in AWD mode, so both roller sets were connected.
As you can see my numbers were 249 HP and 252 Torque.
Going by these numbers for adding back in the 18% and 12%...
18% ... 82 * 1.2195 = 99.999
12% ... 88 * 1.1364 = 100.0032
18 + 12 = 30% ... 70 * 1.4286 = 100.002
Add back in the 18% drive train loss they told you to use...
249 * 1.2195 = ~303.66 HP
252 * 1.2195 = ~307.30 torque
IF the Mustang dynos typically show another 12% lower than say dynojets, then we add back in the 12%...
303.66 * 1.1364 = ~345.08 for HP
307.30 * 1.1364 = ~349.22 for torque
This looks VERY close to the numbers we had figured for the SRT6 (not advertised, but actually closer to the SLK 32 AMG)
Adding both percentages together and then doing just one step...
249 * 1.4286 = ~355.72 for HP
252 * 1.4286 = ~360.01 for torque
There IS a flaw in these calculations. My question is which is right...
Add in each percentage separately OR add the percentages together and then add back in the overall percentage???
By the way Adding 18% back in... is not the same as subtracting it! Because you are working with LESS than 100% for a starting number, you have to actually add in a higher percentage of the number to get a full 18% of the original 100%.
So, if you LOOSE 18% from say 330 from the drive line, you are loosing an actual 18%. 330 * 0.82 = 270.6 ... BUT, if you want to add back in this loss, you must add in MORE than 18% of 270.6!
270.6 * 1.2195 (21.95% added) = 329.9967
Make sense?
Heres the data I had from my completely stock Mustang dyno runs. NOTE: The dyno was being run in AWD mode, so both roller sets were connected.
As you can see my numbers were 249 HP and 252 Torque.
Going by these numbers for adding back in the 18% and 12%...
18% ... 82 * 1.2195 = 99.999
12% ... 88 * 1.1364 = 100.0032
18 + 12 = 30% ... 70 * 1.4286 = 100.002
Add back in the 18% drive train loss they told you to use...
249 * 1.2195 = ~303.66 HP
252 * 1.2195 = ~307.30 torque
IF the Mustang dynos typically show another 12% lower than say dynojets, then we add back in the 12%...
303.66 * 1.1364 = ~345.08 for HP
307.30 * 1.1364 = ~349.22 for torque
This looks VERY close to the numbers we had figured for the SRT6 (not advertised, but actually closer to the SLK 32 AMG)
Adding both percentages together and then doing just one step...
249 * 1.4286 = ~355.72 for HP
252 * 1.4286 = ~360.01 for torque
There IS a flaw in these calculations. My question is which is right...
Add in each percentage separately OR add the percentages together and then add back in the overall percentage???
By the way Adding 18% back in... is not the same as subtracting it! Because you are working with LESS than 100% for a starting number, you have to actually add in a higher percentage of the number to get a full 18% of the original 100%.
So, if you LOOSE 18% from say 330 from the drive line, you are loosing an actual 18%. 330 * 0.82 = 270.6 ... BUT, if you want to add back in this loss, you must add in MORE than 18% of 270.6!
270.6 * 1.2195 (21.95% added) = 329.9967
Make sense?
Let's just say our example car has a true crank hp of 300. Assuming a drive train loss of 20%, that car would have an actual wheel hp of 240. (That's 300 * .80 = 240)
Now put that example car on a Mustang Dyno, which reads numbers 12% less. So a 240 whp car should read as 211.2 on a Mustang dyno. (240 * .88 = 211.2)
Now, I know that you're thinking that I worked that backwards, and you're right. But I did that deliberately. When you talk about losses, you need to work down from the big number (100%).
To work up from the Mustang number, the math works a bit different. In our example car it read 211.2 on the Mustang. To figure out what the actual whp would be we have to divide the 211.2 by 88, then multiply the result by 100. See how that "upsizes" the number proportionally? 211.2 / 88 = 2.4, 2.4 * 100 = 240.
Then to get the crank hp from the whp, divide the whp by 80 then multiply the result by 100. So: 240 / 80 = 3, 3 * 100 = 300. Notice how the numbers work exactly back up to the original crank hp number, showing that the math works, just the method is different dependent on which direction your calculating.
I hope that helps.
In Steve's case:
Mustang hp: 266
Adjusted WHP = 266 / 88 * 100 = 302.3
Adjusted Crank HP = 302.3 / 80 * 100 = 377.9
That's assuming 12% loss for the Mustang dyno, and 20% loss for drivetrain.
Steve: also note your dyno run only went to 5548 RPM. If you take that up to 6200 RPM your numbers should go up another 15-20 hp.
Last edited by tom2112; 05-07-2008 at 09:09 PM.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
tom2112,
Wow... base on your math (which I can find no fault with)...
That means that my car was making the following... STOCK!!!
NOTE: I DID get to redline... Didn't matter that I had both fuses 17 & 18 pulled or not, both runs came out almost identical. This one was without. I can only guess that it was because of the front and back rollers being linked.
Mustang HP: 249
Adjusted WHP = 249 / 88 * 100 = 282.95
Adjusted Crank HP = 282.95 / 80 * 100 = 353.69
Mustang torque: 252
Adjusted Wheel torque = 252 / 88 * 100 = 286.36
Adjusted Crank torque = 286.36 / 80 * 100 = 357.5
Holy horsies Batman! I guess we are about the same stock as the SLK 32 AMG/C32 AMG!!!
... AND I have a slight factory freak!
Wow... base on your math (which I can find no fault with)...
That means that my car was making the following... STOCK!!!
NOTE: I DID get to redline... Didn't matter that I had both fuses 17 & 18 pulled or not, both runs came out almost identical. This one was without. I can only guess that it was because of the front and back rollers being linked.
Mustang HP: 249
Adjusted WHP = 249 / 88 * 100 = 282.95
Adjusted Crank HP = 282.95 / 80 * 100 = 353.69
Mustang torque: 252
Adjusted Wheel torque = 252 / 88 * 100 = 286.36
Adjusted Crank torque = 286.36 / 80 * 100 = 357.5
Holy horsies Batman! I guess we are about the same stock as the SLK 32 AMG/C32 AMG!!!
... AND I have a slight factory freak!
Last edited by MMZ_TimeLord; 05-07-2008 at 09:56 PM.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Take a look at the A/F chart.
Assuming that it was a tailpipe reading, the 11:1 (approx) average is actually reading about a half-point leaner than it actually is.
This means that you were closer to 10.5:1 in acutality. There is a bit more power to be had in your combo, IMO.
Assuming that it was a tailpipe reading, the 11:1 (approx) average is actually reading about a half-point leaner than it actually is.
This means that you were closer to 10.5:1 in acutality. There is a bit more power to be had in your combo, IMO.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Steve,
I'm sorry to see/hear that you are dissapointed with your visit to our facility. I am happy to read on here that other owners are not particularly suprised with the dyno numbers that you are seeing based on your particular combination. As mentioned while you were here, it is IMPOSSIBLE to calculate and exact parasitic drivetrain loss or a specific dyno percentage loss as compared to other brands/facilities. Also, it would be wise to take into account that a companies advertised power increases are never exact and each and every car reacts differently to modifications, weather conditions, altitiude, baro pressure, ect ect ect. Just because someone elses car makes X whp and Xwtq in Washington State obviously doesnt mean that your car, or even that car will make that same power in Florida (or Kentucky for that matter). I'm sure you are aware of that aspect however.
As far as the "100 mph" thing that you mentioned. I had/have no problem taking that dyno to 160mph (which is what it is rated at) and have done so multiple times before. I saw no reason based on your cars output graph (refer to the one you posted originally) to take your car beyond where we did. As you can see the HP levels were leveled off and there were no significant gains to be had over where we were. (Possibly 1-3 whp). I would have had no problem taking it higher for you had you mentioned it while you were here. There is simply no need to beat on it any more then nessasary if you are not going to see any gain from it in my opinion.
Also, with the fuel curve I was seeing on the dyno and my experience with tuning cars, I have to come to the conclusion one of three things. Either A: your tune is off and your car needs to be leaned out in the upper RPMS, B: your tune is off and your car is adding fuel based off of excessive knock voltage to protect itself, or C: your tune is spot on and the IAT's on your car are excessively high do to the added boost through the stock heat exchanger and the computer is adding fuel based off these values to cool the combustion and protect itself from knock. In either event, this is also another reason not to take your car any higher in the RPM's then we did while we had it here. The computers will also learn based on the conditions and driving styles of the owner and it could have been seeing these higher IAT's for some time and just trimmed the fuel curve richer based on this condition.
In either event, I am sorry you were not happy with your experience here or that you did not find our facility to be as nice (or as "state of the art" I believe you put it) as you expected and if there is anyway that I might be able to help correct this I am open to suggestion. Please feel free to email or call me anytime you like.
Charles Gordon
Auto Motion Inc.
502 589 1155
I'm sorry to see/hear that you are dissapointed with your visit to our facility. I am happy to read on here that other owners are not particularly suprised with the dyno numbers that you are seeing based on your particular combination. As mentioned while you were here, it is IMPOSSIBLE to calculate and exact parasitic drivetrain loss or a specific dyno percentage loss as compared to other brands/facilities. Also, it would be wise to take into account that a companies advertised power increases are never exact and each and every car reacts differently to modifications, weather conditions, altitiude, baro pressure, ect ect ect. Just because someone elses car makes X whp and Xwtq in Washington State obviously doesnt mean that your car, or even that car will make that same power in Florida (or Kentucky for that matter). I'm sure you are aware of that aspect however.
As far as the "100 mph" thing that you mentioned. I had/have no problem taking that dyno to 160mph (which is what it is rated at) and have done so multiple times before. I saw no reason based on your cars output graph (refer to the one you posted originally) to take your car beyond where we did. As you can see the HP levels were leveled off and there were no significant gains to be had over where we were. (Possibly 1-3 whp). I would have had no problem taking it higher for you had you mentioned it while you were here. There is simply no need to beat on it any more then nessasary if you are not going to see any gain from it in my opinion.
Also, with the fuel curve I was seeing on the dyno and my experience with tuning cars, I have to come to the conclusion one of three things. Either A: your tune is off and your car needs to be leaned out in the upper RPMS, B: your tune is off and your car is adding fuel based off of excessive knock voltage to protect itself, or C: your tune is spot on and the IAT's on your car are excessively high do to the added boost through the stock heat exchanger and the computer is adding fuel based off these values to cool the combustion and protect itself from knock. In either event, this is also another reason not to take your car any higher in the RPM's then we did while we had it here. The computers will also learn based on the conditions and driving styles of the owner and it could have been seeing these higher IAT's for some time and just trimmed the fuel curve richer based on this condition.
In either event, I am sorry you were not happy with your experience here or that you did not find our facility to be as nice (or as "state of the art" I believe you put it) as you expected and if there is anyway that I might be able to help correct this I am open to suggestion. Please feel free to email or call me anytime you like.
Charles Gordon
Auto Motion Inc.
502 589 1155
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
OUCH!!! He sounds like a genuine person. From the pics I seen (atleast from the inside) it looks modern enough to me. You knew what you were getting into with a mustang dyno as far as low numbers. Sometimes that cold hard reality sucks. Go to a dynojet and track and make yourself feel better steve.
Last edited by BlUEMDsrt6; 05-08-2008 at 06:28 AM.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by BlUEMDsrt6
OUCH!!! He sounds like a genuine person. From the pics I seen (atleast from the inside) it looks modern enough to me. You knew what you were getting into with a mustang dyno as far as low numbers. Sometimes that cold hard reality sucks. Go to a dynojet and track and make yourself feel better steve.
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by MMZ_TimeLord
tom2112,
Wow... base on your math (which I can find no fault with)...
That means that my car was making the following... STOCK!!!
NOTE: I DID get to redline... Didn't matter that I had both fuses 17 & 18 pulled or not, both runs came out almost identical. This one was without. I can only guess that it was because of the front and back rollers being linked.
Mustang HP: 249
Adjusted WHP = 249 / 88 * 100 = 282.95
Adjusted Crank HP = 282.95 / 80 * 100 = 353.69
Mustang torque: 252
Adjusted Wheel torque = 252 / 88 * 100 = 286.36
Adjusted Crank torque = 286.36 / 80 * 100 = 357.5
Holy horsies Batman! I guess we are about the same stock as the SLK 32 AMG/C32 AMG!!!
... AND I have a slight factory freak!
Wow... base on your math (which I can find no fault with)...
That means that my car was making the following... STOCK!!!
NOTE: I DID get to redline... Didn't matter that I had both fuses 17 & 18 pulled or not, both runs came out almost identical. This one was without. I can only guess that it was because of the front and back rollers being linked.
Mustang HP: 249
Adjusted WHP = 249 / 88 * 100 = 282.95
Adjusted Crank HP = 282.95 / 80 * 100 = 353.69
Mustang torque: 252
Adjusted Wheel torque = 252 / 88 * 100 = 286.36
Adjusted Crank torque = 286.36 / 80 * 100 = 357.5
Holy horsies Batman! I guess we are about the same stock as the SLK 32 AMG/C32 AMG!!!
... AND I have a slight factory freak!
I've tried running the numbers with ET's weights and speeds when compared to dyno numbers, but I can't get the math right to figure it out. I'll keep crunching numbers until I get somewhere. I _know_ there is a mathematical formula for determining the amount of power required to displace a vehicle 1/4 of a mile in a specified period of time. That would give us a good imperical whp number to work with. Maybe I'll stop by my old physics professor's and ask him!
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by tom2112
I wouldn't get too excited yet. I'm not really comfortable saying the a Mustang dyno reads out 12% lower than actual whp. I think it's safe to say that it reads out 12% lower than a dynojet. But who is to say which one is reading out the correct number? I'd put money on it that neither one is actually correct, and that both are off by some margin. I'd also bet that we could get experts from both dynojet and mustang to tell you why theirs is correct. I wish there was a way to tell.
We try and keep these machines as accurate as possible. Things are constantly changing. Things as simple as a bearing getting wear and adding more drag can effect the results slightly, and that is the reason why we spend as much money on maintenence on these two dyno's as possible.
What are ALL the mods on your car Waldig? If it is just the CAI and gasket matching, with no other modifications and you are making the same or more power according to your dyno runs as guys with CAI, Pulley, full exhaust, Computer reflash, ect. then I would have to question your numbers being high, just as Steve questions his being low. Just curious.
I along with ANY OTHER dyno owner/operator can make these machines read higher or lower if they want. What benifit would I have to making them read LOW and having people dissatisfied? Much more to gain by turning them up and showing people what they want to see, whether its right or not.
Charles
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by Charles@AutoMotion
You sir, could not be more correct. These machines are tuning tools only. Dynojet put out a press release several years back stating that their machines read higher because thats what customers want. Its a marketing tactic that works for them. We purchased mustang dyno's because they are load bearing and provide the resolution that we feel we need to accurately tune a car to its potential, within the limits of safety. No two machines read the same and everyone thinks theirs is correct. I don't pay hardly any attention to the horsepower when I am tuning other then to see where it has changed and how much. The numbers are just numbers to me, although I know people get hung-up on them.
We try and keep these machines as accurate as possible. Things are constantly changing. Things as simple as a bearing getting wear and adding more drag can effect the results slightly, and that is the reason why we spend as much money on maintenence on these two dyno's as possible.
What are ALL the mods on your car Waldig? If it is just the CAI and gasket matching, with no other modifications and you are making the same or more power according to your dyno runs as guys with CAI, Pulley, full exhaust, Computer reflash, ect. then I would have to question your numbers being high, just as Steve questions his being low. Just curious.
I along with ANY OTHER dyno owner/operator can make these machines read higher or lower if they want. What benifit would I have to making them read LOW and having people dissatisfied? Much more to gain by turning them up and showing people what they want to see, whether its right or not.
Charles
We try and keep these machines as accurate as possible. Things are constantly changing. Things as simple as a bearing getting wear and adding more drag can effect the results slightly, and that is the reason why we spend as much money on maintenence on these two dyno's as possible.
What are ALL the mods on your car Waldig? If it is just the CAI and gasket matching, with no other modifications and you are making the same or more power according to your dyno runs as guys with CAI, Pulley, full exhaust, Computer reflash, ect. then I would have to question your numbers being high, just as Steve questions his being low. Just curious.
I along with ANY OTHER dyno owner/operator can make these machines read higher or lower if they want. What benifit would I have to making them read LOW and having people dissatisfied? Much more to gain by turning them up and showing people what they want to see, whether its right or not.
Charles
Like tom said, thanks for coming here to explain things a little better and I agree with you! Its "just a number" and people get hung up on the numbers. Use the dyno to fine tune the car under acceleration. After that, head to the 1/4 mile to do some testing. That is the true test IMO.
Steve,
do you plan on taking it to the track?
Re: WTF, No Way These DYNO #'s are right
Originally Posted by distantpulse
Charles,
Like tom said, thanks for coming here to explain things a little better and I agree with you! Its "just a number" and people get hung up on the numbers. Use the dyno to fine tune the car under acceleration. After that, head to the 1/4 mile to do some testing. That is the true test IMO.
Steve,
do you plan on taking it to the track?
Like tom said, thanks for coming here to explain things a little better and I agree with you! Its "just a number" and people get hung up on the numbers. Use the dyno to fine tune the car under acceleration. After that, head to the 1/4 mile to do some testing. That is the true test IMO.
Steve,
do you plan on taking it to the track?