TURBO TUNING-PUMP GAS VS RACE GAS Full Dyno Results

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  • čas přidán 23. 07. 2024
  • Turbo tuning. How much power is lost having to run a pump-gas tune on your junkyard turbo LS? 91-octane, pump gas requires less ignition timing than race gas or E85. The lower ignition timing has a dramatic effect on power. Check out the difference in power when I compared a pump-gas tune with 12 degrees of timing to a race gas (E85) tune with 20 degrees of timing on a turbo 4.8L. I also ran multiple timing levels in between (14, 16 and 18 degrees). Why didn't the A/F change?
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Komentáře • 366

  • @mxguy2438
    @mxguy2438 Před 4 lety +66

    Best video yet. Excellent dense format, real data, real tech, reasonable length, good editing, good audio nothing annoying. You've got a brand here Richard. Keep it up. Have a great holiday and thanks!

    • @dontrudeau9362
      @dontrudeau9362 Před 4 lety +2

      100% agreed!

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety +2

      thnx

    • @legros731
      @legros731 Před 4 lety +1

      Lol the audio is terrible like all is video can barrely ear is voice on Phone

    • @mxguy2438
      @mxguy2438 Před 4 lety +1

      @@legros731 there is like 30 seconds in the beginning where he is in the dyno cell where its weak but still okish, but the rest is fine on my systems.

    • @martinrodger9565
      @martinrodger9565 Před 4 lety +1

      Also 100% agree. Zero filler, all killer info with clear conclusions on set changes acknowledging other variables.

  • @SloppyMechanics
    @SloppyMechanics Před 4 lety +59

    4.8 and s475, this is the way

  • @BlindBatG34
    @BlindBatG34 Před 4 lety +37

    Wow Richard, just wow. That was like watching a mini version of Engine Masters with more technical content in less time. I can now see why the cult of E85 is so devout. I wish I could give this video two thumbs up.

    • @TheProchargedmopar
      @TheProchargedmopar Před 4 lety +3

      BlindBatG34 You can, 👍👍

    • @buiItnotbought
      @buiItnotbought Před 4 lety

      Maybe give it 3

    • @81eagle
      @81eagle Před 4 lety

      I wish I could find E85

    • @SweatyFatGuy
      @SweatyFatGuy Před 3 lety +2

      @@81eagle If you live in the states, go here put in your city and state, and it will tell you where it is and sometimes how much $$ e85prices.com
      I daily drive 455s on E85 that have 'race gas only' compression between 11:1 and 13:1, its so easy and man does it run good.

    • @81eagle
      @81eagle Před 3 lety

      @@SweatyFatGuy Thanks for the link. Looks like there's some 70mi from me. I'll have to call to be sure.

  • @baby-sharkgto4902
    @baby-sharkgto4902 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm absolutely loving all of these videos!

  • @chrisjamieson1285
    @chrisjamieson1285 Před 4 lety +1

    I learn something pretty much every time I watch your videos. Thanks for all of your hard work!

  • @TR99FRC
    @TR99FRC Před 4 lety +1

    Perfect length of time for videos. Excellent knowledge and information. Keep them coming sir!

  • @simonaragon6590
    @simonaragon6590 Před 4 lety +2

    Great video , I absolutely loved it
    This is one of the videos where I’ve learned the most and I easily understand it .someone with very little knowledge on engine can understand it because u break it down so easy for someone to understand

  • @ryanaxberg9263
    @ryanaxberg9263 Před 4 lety +1

    I really like the video!! Perfect blend of everything. Also great test, keep it up Richard

  • @juicyjuice3282
    @juicyjuice3282 Před rokem +2

    Old video but I’d also like to see the timing curve and more explanation on where to ramp timing in/take away. Thanks for this priceless knowledge you provide 🤘🏻

  • @fbanda20
    @fbanda20 Před 4 lety +4

    I love great info in the morning as I drink my coffee ☕️.

  • @brandonpanozzo86
    @brandonpanozzo86 Před 4 lety +1

    Early morning turbo information hell yeah richard you are the man

  • @ezelk1337
    @ezelk1337 Před 4 lety

    Some of the best explanations of how to make Horsepower and torque on CZcams!
    You should be at 100K subscribers by now. Keep up the great work. I'll be watching.

  • @fc3sluis
    @fc3sluis Před 4 lety +2

    Great info. Love the detail and showing the timing difference, afrs, and boost. Gotta love the Holley closed loop tuning too shows what a good job it does keeping target afrs

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety +1

      Thnx, but we didn't run closed loop-we ran open loop with no change in the amount of fuel supplied at each timing level

  • @flatbrokemodsquad4241
    @flatbrokemodsquad4241 Před 4 lety +2

    great video Richard! I like how you explained each graph. I'm making the jump to E85 for my project even though the nearest distributor is 20 mile away.

  • @drakeolson2539
    @drakeolson2539 Před 4 lety +1

    Man, great content again!!! Really learned a lot on this one!! Keep up the great work!!! Thank you!!!

  • @beaugouin4383
    @beaugouin4383 Před 4 lety

    loving the channel dude! all of it! still have the origional big bang edition magazine! even better now! cant get enough!

  • @alexrozier6550
    @alexrozier6550 Před 4 lety +1

    These are awesome videos man. Keep them coming.

  • @wymansst
    @wymansst Před 4 lety +1

    New subscriber. Enjoying watching and learning from your videos. Keep up the great content.!

  • @eliascorteslopez1094
    @eliascorteslopez1094 Před 4 lety

    Awesome test Richard, thanks for what you do.🙂

  • @johnrodabaugh4887
    @johnrodabaugh4887 Před 4 lety +1

    Loving the new longer videos!

  • @Chasemanuti
    @Chasemanuti Před 4 lety +1

    Like the longer formats!👍

  • @cammykakes5420
    @cammykakes5420 Před 2 lety +1

    This was an excellent technical vid

  • @DrewJZ
    @DrewJZ Před 4 lety +32

    E85 often hides detonation and the dyno is a great indicator of this. So I agree with you that relying on a knock sensor is not a good method. I'm also glad that you mentioned where you should pull timing (pk torque which is also peak cylinder pressure). That is how you keep rods from bending amongst other components. Also, a good way to tell that you're maxxed out on timing is when timing stops making power. If 1* only makes a few hp rather than ~15-20hp, you're done. Back it down. Good tuners will also know how to introduce cylinder pressure (timing ramp). An ugly timing map that isn't smooth will literally cause turbulence in the combustion chamber. However, a smooth transition of timing from peak torque to max rpm can get you better and safer results. I would go into how to read spark plugs as an indicator but I could elaborate for days. Maybe a good idea for another video?

    • @baby-sharkgto4902
      @baby-sharkgto4902 Před 4 lety +1

      Yes I would love a video on reading spark plugs!

    • @DodgyBrothersEngineering
      @DodgyBrothersEngineering Před 4 lety +2

      DrewJ_Z care to elaborate on how E85 "hides" knock? Knock should be knock. E85 has a much higher RON value, which by it's very nature means it will take more timing before it knocks, but how do you think it hides it? Either it is knocking, or it isn't. A set of knock ears should pick it up regardless.

    • @Rajivc666
      @Rajivc666 Před 4 lety +1

      @@DodgyBrothersEngineering guess what he meant is that on e85 sometimes you can increase timing over MBT and still not knock, which makes knock based tuning not very ideal for e85.

    • @DodgyBrothersEngineering
      @DodgyBrothersEngineering Před 4 lety

      @@Rajivc666 ahhh yeah that makes sense.

    • @fastinradfordable
      @fastinradfordable Před 4 lety

      Also can’t rely on knock sensors on a ls because they fill with rain water and corrode.

  • @eros20V
    @eros20V Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent presentation . Repetition of key facts is key for adult learning :)

  • @nitrousshovelhead
    @nitrousshovelhead Před 4 lety

    best video yet. thank you and keep up the good work

  • @mikemaccracken3112
    @mikemaccracken3112 Před 4 lety +4

    Great video Richard.

  • @TrojanHorse1959
    @TrojanHorse1959 Před 4 lety +2

    Merry Christmas & Happy New Year Richard & Family!
    Merry Christmas & Happy New Year to everyone else too!

  • @mattvorhees6055
    @mattvorhees6055 Před 4 lety +3

    These videos are very helpful. I'm new to the turbo scene so I come here to learn. I'm gonna do a single on a 5.7 hemi so more hemi content would be great.

  • @smallmouthfreaks7609
    @smallmouthfreaks7609 Před 2 lety +1

    That is an incredible difference. This video just changed my mind about running pump gas. I have no E85 pumps near me, but for over 100hp difference, I'll go find some

  • @ToprankImporters
    @ToprankImporters Před 4 lety +1

    Great video. Sound is much better with the lav. I am now a member of the Cult of E85. Smells great, awesome for a turbo car.

  • @tsiawdspyder
    @tsiawdspyder Před 4 lety +2

    Great video richard. Only thing I think you could do differently would be mess with the sounch quality. Some parts of the video I can hardly hear you talking while other parts are really loud. But definitely keep the great videos coming. Very helpful and educational.

  • @derekwoods8199
    @derekwoods8199 Před 4 lety +1

    That was a good breakdown.

  • @tptrsn
    @tptrsn Před 4 lety +2

    One of your best videos Richard, thank you!!! Ask and ye shall receive on the Richard Holdener channel. Lol (seems like I asked for something like this video yesterday?)

  • @drivinwithdrew7676
    @drivinwithdrew7676 Před 4 lety +1

    Sweet video! Great test 👍

  • @supercharged6771
    @supercharged6771 Před 4 lety +1

    You are a pioneer my friend, I've had a roots for about ten years and getting hard numbers has been difficult, lots of talk but slippery when it comes to numbers... keep up the great content. Get some exhaust numbers to mix with with the timing

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety +1

      i did the timing test on a number of other combos including a Whipple supercharged 4.8L

  • @fasteddy
    @fasteddy Před rokem +4

    Show us your timing curve Richard, love what you do thanks

  • @SteveFuentesRacing
    @SteveFuentesRacing Před 4 lety

    These are really really good videos

  • @johnthefisherman6090
    @johnthefisherman6090 Před 3 lety

    Very very good stuff man

  • @DaOnE51T
    @DaOnE51T Před 4 lety +2

    Great content sir. I have learned timing is everything. Too little timing=not enough power too much timing=broken motor. You have to sneak it in. I always start conservative with pump gas. I always think of it as the final touch in the tune, kind of like the final condiment in cooking! Lol

  • @divafizz
    @divafizz Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you Richard.

  • @plumbs7199
    @plumbs7199 Před 4 lety +1

    Very informative, thank you !

  • @TheDward0909
    @TheDward0909 Před 4 lety

    Richard, love love love your channel and thank you for all the time and work you put in to these tests for us to learn and understand. Can you add the differences of hp, torque to the videos (as txt)? Would super helpful! To visually see the “diff +80hp, diff -60tq...” maybe at both peak and avg? Just a suggestion. Again thank you so much. Your knowledge is extremely valuable!

  • @byronboost
    @byronboost Před 3 lety +2

    love your videos

  • @MichaelWilliams-wo7yw
    @MichaelWilliams-wo7yw Před 3 lety +1

    I learned something today, thanks.

  • @321-Gone
    @321-Gone Před 4 lety

    I like the information heavy comment. No hype just info. You are great at explaining tuning. I think you might be the guy to explain building a tune from scratch using MPH on the time slip. Not allot of content on that told in a clear way. It'd be interesting to see this same test but with a manual boost controller with no correction. As a follow up to this one.

  • @brianwiniarski4490
    @brianwiniarski4490 Před 4 lety +4

    Bad ass video like usual! Would like to see the difference in the spark plug strap color vs timing change. Like is 20* near the bottom, 16* at the bend, 12* before the bend etc.

  • @johnparrish9215
    @johnparrish9215 Před 4 lety +23

    Mr. Holdener,
    Some day, if you have time or interest, could you do a test of Water/Meth (75/25) injection and it's relationship to ignition timing??
    It could be interesting

  • @dennisclanton5342
    @dennisclanton5342 Před 4 lety +1

    great vid! Thanks

  • @collinsracingfabrication7

    Good video!

  • @artcampbell5315
    @artcampbell5315 Před 4 lety

    yay! i can read the numbers on the graph this time!

  • @babyruuth
    @babyruuth Před 3 lety +1

    Pump and W/M testing would be awesome!

  • @RHYNOMAN12
    @RHYNOMAN12 Před 4 lety +1

    Awesome channel!!
    Richard please read.
    2 things I’ve been curious about testing,
    1. supercharger setup through headers which are 8 to 1. Curious if the exhaust gasses will raise TQ further with 8 to 1 exhaust pulses. Using exhaust pulses in the 8-1 to rotate out the gasses out. Also the exhaust note should be nice. (LQ4 with whipple 2300)
    2. Single Turbo setup (T6) with twin scroll using 4 to 1 collector per scroll. Will using the rotating pulse into turbo improve the spool up? Will this reduce lag? What size waste gates will this require?

  • @bebetekracing2412
    @bebetekracing2412 Před 4 lety +5

    Great video Richard.. Love the channel. Just please do something about the volume. Most of ur videos are recorded low volume. 👌👌

  • @oklifrederick1734
    @oklifrederick1734 Před 4 lety +6

    The afr didn't change bc the engine is still burning all the fuel just closer to tdc

  • @rexwarren3052
    @rexwarren3052 Před 4 lety

    Great videos

  • @gregdavis3324
    @gregdavis3324 Před 3 lety +1

    Great video, a couple of thoughts. 1. Did the EFI system utilize wideband O2 sensors? This coupled with the use of electronically controlled wastegates could have played a roll in the reason the AFR stayed relatively the same, pull after pull. 2. I would have liked to see the EGT's for the race tune Vs the pump gas tune.

  • @jamieknight9636
    @jamieknight9636 Před 4 lety +1

    Great work Richard, thx. Do you think this would be a reasonable example for a flexfuel timing table?

  • @FirstLast-bi8xi
    @FirstLast-bi8xi Před 4 lety +29

    Egt would have been good to see

    • @Klumpi84
      @Klumpi84 Před 4 lety +1

      Please Richard Holdener let us know the EGTs!

    • @sbc350
      @sbc350 Před 4 lety +1

      I'd like to see that too

    • @james10739
      @james10739 Před 4 lety

      Ya seems like it would change

    • @JayBeezy31
      @JayBeezy31 Před 4 lety

      im also curious, but we use egt to get an alcohol tune close, then fine tune w timing, but yes i am also curious guys lol.

    • @timothybolden9955
      @timothybolden9955 Před 4 lety +2

      Why would that matter if it’s not running lean?

  • @KSIXRIDER
    @KSIXRIDER Před 4 lety +1

    Great info.

  • @Belktronix
    @Belktronix Před 3 lety

    WOW learned a bunch on that one, THANKS Richard!...best class ever...So how do you figure out just how much timing you can actually run? Do knock sensors give you a heads up? or is that too late?...What happens to the exhaust valve temps as you drop timing? cooler? hotter?

  • @dentellreed7088
    @dentellreed7088 Před 4 lety

    Love what you do! Now I'm wondering just how much less power dense is 91 octane with all the timing steps?

  • @soundslikealot
    @soundslikealot Před 4 lety +1

    Would like to see/listen some more tuning secrets and just information from you on this topic 👏

  • @Sands10welding
    @Sands10welding Před 4 lety +4

    Love your videos but do something about the extremely low volume please!

  • @halfbakedcoatingsllc9911
    @halfbakedcoatingsllc9911 Před 3 lety +1

    I was running 20 degrees of timing at 10lbs of boost on SBC with 93 octane with no issues I'm a member of the blow through mob on Facebook. Lots of guys running even more boost than that with pump gas

  • @Turbogto_guy
    @Turbogto_guy Před 4 lety +6

    Holy shit! I’d be interested in seeing if pump gas would make a different power at at lower timing because the burn rates of two different fuels will burn differently.

    • @rebel4life383
      @rebel4life383 Před 4 lety +3

      theoretically it should be the same but the timing changes would be further down on the graph I'd assume. peak being around 12* like he mentioned. I'd be interested in the same vid and motor using 93 pump as well

    • @MLFranklin
      @MLFranklin Před 3 lety

      Flame speed isn't that different for most hydrocarbons. The bigger difference is the resistance to knock.

  • @davemackinnon6487
    @davemackinnon6487 Před 4 lety +3

    Um? How is this a test of race fuel versus pump gas? It’s a demonstration of how timing affects power. Does E85 burn at the same rate as pump gas? I doubt it. I’d have much preferred to see you actually change the fuel.

  • @adamloveshondas3122
    @adamloveshondas3122 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Great info some people don’t get it if you explain it to them it’s like they can’t wrap there head around the idea that the piston speed will out run the spark witch causes loss of power you want it to spark shot 12 degrees after top dead center just when the piston it’s starting to fall😂😂it’s was supper cool to see the effects on paper

  • @SoGoodRc1
    @SoGoodRc1 Před 4 lety +1

    Richard its a great test !!! We need the same test using meth injection over better fuel, lot of us have a hard time tuning with it maybe something to look into. Literally the same test just increase the meth with timing see if itll go 20°. Awesome work nevertheless great explination of piston position and reaction.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety +1

      water meth has less than ideal distribution in these long-runner intakes

  • @shitbox7413
    @shitbox7413 Před 4 lety +1

    Very interesting. 👍🏻

  • @finnroen2334
    @finnroen2334 Před 4 lety +9

    This was good. Boosted engines need timing on pump gas too and this is why lower compression ratio is way more effective on pump gas than most people seems to think. A low compression ratio engine with the same or more boost, and 20 degrees of timing would be interesting. The ratio between peak cylinder pressure and BMEP gets better too. :)

    • @jimhopps2359
      @jimhopps2359 Před 2 lety +3

      I would like to see pump gas like 92oct with 8.5-1 to a 10-1 motor. As stated the More timing you can run might be better with pump gas. Equal to equal it's hard but two motors with different pistons and different timing to see what's better.

  • @rickg1984
    @rickg1984 Před 4 lety

    Richard Holdener any change you build a class type motor in a the low budget range like a smc to help out people get into racing and spend money wisely.
    Thanks for the great work.

  • @HiShBL2
    @HiShBL2 Před 4 lety +6

    I understand that what you did was an illustration of timing vs power , but in fact a pump fuel acts differently than e85 , meaning on 12 degrees of timing both fuels would have different results .

    • @TheRcbthree
      @TheRcbthree Před 4 lety

      agreed, i think this would provide much more info.

    • @calvinevans8305
      @calvinevans8305 Před 4 lety

      Low octane expands quicker, burns faster right?

    • @frenchonion4595
      @frenchonion4595 Před 2 lety

      I know it drives freaking nuts that he refuses to run 91 pump for some odd reason even the engine masters guys beat around the bush. One episode they said they would test 91 on a turbo 5.3 build but they beat around the bush too and ran 114 race fuel. It's like they are scared to tune it because it might scatter. Its honestly kinda weird and you're right about that. There's guys making big power on pump

  • @jamesparker3822
    @jamesparker3822 Před 4 lety

    Great video. What sort of a/r do you run just before initial spool up and during. I can see it's in the 11 range from 3500 but was just wondering what it was before that.

  • @tomwhite9034
    @tomwhite9034 Před 4 lety +1

    Hmmm this is what I find interesting. I am learning some really cool shit thank you mr holdener. I'm speaking enthusiasts 🖒🖒🖒

  • @oldudesrule
    @oldudesrule Před 4 lety +2

    But you didn't use pump gas ??

  • @ARK842001
    @ARK842001 Před 4 lety +11

    It would be interesting to see how water/meth would change the values both in throttle body injection and port injection, and maybe in the turbo inlet also.

  • @thomasfleming1121
    @thomasfleming1121 Před 4 lety +11

    Would love to see a 91 pump gas-water/meth test, on stock LS intake would have to use port injection being as in engine masters the ls intake doesn’t wet flow water/meth very well.

  • @michaelblackmon5010
    @michaelblackmon5010 Před 2 lety +1

    E85=pump gas? Not in the Southeast sir. put that 347 with the 174 Weiand on the dyno and tune it to live on 91 octane. down here E85 is only had at the dragstrip right beside the "race fuel". let's compare 91 timing to e85 and let's see the max tune/ hp on both. keep up the good work Mr Holdner. love your channel.

  • @workhard6445
    @workhard6445 Před 5 měsíci

    Awesome information that back in 90s was top secret no Internet or CZcams 😂

  • @kingleeland5122
    @kingleeland5122 Před 3 lety

    Unreal

  • @DodgyBrothersEngineering
    @DodgyBrothersEngineering Před 4 lety +1

    Richard you've got me scratching my head a bit on this one... I'm not completely sure by what you mean when you say 12 or 20 degrees. Are you just setting the initial (some call it base) timing to 20 degrees and carrying that all the way through the map? or are you doing something different below 4000 and setting it to 20 degrees above 4000? Would love to see you do a full video on just tuning, especially on turbos. Actually would be nice to see what you change between turbo and N/A.

  • @andriosz
    @andriosz Před 4 lety +2

    Same test, but comparing 87 to 93 and to E85 :) I like my gas cheap in my daily driver :)

  • @Parents_of_Twins
    @Parents_of_Twins Před 4 lety

    I would like to see a similar test run with pump gas Vs race gas. I wonder about the difference between ethanol/gas mix of E85 versus 93 octane gas the difference between how they combust. It seems to me that there should be a difference there in the combustion rate and that should change the amount of timing as well. I think it would make an interesting test. Also 20 degrees for max timing seems low what about testing an engine that is capable of taking more timing 30-35 degrees for max. I think the overall results would be similar but perhaps not. As a scientist (Chemist) and engine enthusiast I really love this channel, keep up the good work.

  • @superfuntime3107
    @superfuntime3107 Před 4 lety +1

    When you refer to your timing number is that the initial timing locked out without any advance curve as engine speed increases ?

  • @3800TURBO
    @3800TURBO Před 4 lety +2

    Richard when you get a chance test E98. Test it at richer than normal levels with higher output ignition. I found you can add fuel and timing and keep increasing power as long as you can light the heavy mixture.

  • @Skidmark75
    @Skidmark75 Před 4 lety +1

    I'm curious if you used e85 for all the runs and if so would pump gas have done a little better at the 12 degree timing? And is there a sweet spot with pump gas, perhaps less boost and more timing or does it come out about the same?

  • @00infernoGT
    @00infernoGT Před 3 lety +1

    air:fuel describes a measurement of fuel and air in the cylinder. Changing the point at which you light that mixture will not change the ratio that was already inside the cylinder to start with. you can have 0 or 30 degrees and there wont be any difference until the mixture fails to light and burn completely. once you see the engine failing to burn the fuel, you will start to get different readings. In some instances you can find the sensor showing extremely rich, past that it will start to go extremely "lean". This doesnt mean the engine is necessarily running lean, but you're looking at an oxygen sensor. If the fuel didnt burn, the oxygen wasnt used and it will be present in the exhaust when it passes by the sensor.

  • @hillbillydeluxe08
    @hillbillydeluxe08 Před 4 lety +2

    Should do a mild big block build to see what the limits are of the blocks being gen4. 2bolt vs 4 bolt. Arp bolts ect. Budget crank and middle of the road rods. Stock caps and maybe a girdle and see what a guy could do out of his garage on a turbo big block without hurting it. Thanks for the vids!

    • @hillbillydeluxe08
      @hillbillydeluxe08 Před 4 lety +1

      Maybe even a stock bottom end deal

    • @TurboDog73TX
      @TurboDog73TX Před 4 lety

      He has done a few big block / turbo vids. IIRC, He has even done a "big bang' BBC build a while back, but I don't know if He's ever posted the results.

    • @hillbillydeluxe08
      @hillbillydeluxe08 Před 4 lety

      @@TurboDog73TX I seen the nitrous one and the turbo one but who runs stock heads? Atleast a chinese top end and a decent bump stick is what most would run. Would love to see how much it could do being the turbo has less stress on the guts then the nitrous. People talk about the blocks breaking around 1k or 1100hp. But do they really when done with a slightly educated approach. Girdle, gaskets, arp bolts, good tuning ect

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety +1

      already took a stock Gen 6 bottom end with ring gap to nearly 1300 hp-there is more left

    • @TurboDog73TX
      @TurboDog73TX Před 4 lety

      @@richardholdener1727 Richard, is there a link to that vid? I know I pestered You forever on FB and I still don't recall seeing the vid of the 1300hp BBC. Thanks man

  • @sebfullick5011
    @sebfullick5011 Před 3 lety

    interesting to see back to back of fuel and boost vs timing

  • @douggreen1105
    @douggreen1105 Před 4 lety +2

    Would love to see this on 91-93 octane,,E85 isn’t available where I live.

  • @ryanaxberg9263
    @ryanaxberg9263 Před 4 lety +3

    nothing changed on the afr because the same amount of fuel and air were in each cylinder on each test. Timing just made higher cylinder pressure and as a result more powa

  • @remybrouwer8700
    @remybrouwer8700 Před 4 lety

    where in the engine will you recommend to install the knock sensor, and how accurate will it be if you are running solid cams since it will rattle and the sensor may pickup that and think it is knock, what about the rear cylinders which are normally the hotter ones, do you prefer to install it there or near your leaner cylinders .

  • @davidcakers6818
    @davidcakers6818 Před 3 lety +1

    any chance you could include a timing graph when doing this as I'm not clear how the advance curve would look when you're reducing the timing

  • @W5rr2nG
    @W5rr2nG Před 4 lety

    Late seeing this video.. but can you PLEASE do timing curve video on pump gas and e85 with dyno results on let’s say a heathy higher compression LS? You mentioned it on this with a boosted engine, but I’d like to see it compared to a N/A engine. Please and thanks.

  • @pyric
    @pyric Před 4 lety

    One point that is relevant to the discussion but not to this test is different fuels have different properties that will also effect detonation & hp. Leaded race fuels may have oxygen added that improves hp output. Also E85 & Methanol have cooling properties that also add hp & combat detonation. It would be interesting to see tests finding knock limits of pump gas and what differences spraying meth or mixing ethanol would do to it.... but would be harder to test. Awesome test though people don't understand timing well enough.

  • @sambo92
    @sambo92 Před 2 lety +1

    Fuel to air is about thermal management, not necessarily power. Timing is where the power comes from.

  • @AJsSpeedShop
    @AJsSpeedShop Před 4 lety +1

    Richard, any plans for any turbo/blown LT motor testing? There seems to be different tuning characteristics for DI engines (leaner AFR, more timing etc)... I’d love to see your testing/thoughts on this.
    LT/DI engines will definitely be the way of the future.

    • @richardholdener1727
      @richardholdener1727  Před 4 lety

      I have an L83 5.3L test motor I have run some tests with-I need fuel injectors and a pump to add boost

  • @46kvolt
    @46kvolt Před 4 lety +2

    Richard, I have just started a LY6 swap, I am really just going to clean up the motor except for a cam swap and maybe springs. Can you do a video on VVT and if it helps at all with tuning and power or to get rid of it. I would like to know before I make that cam purchase! Thanks, live the channel!

    • @simpleman2004
      @simpleman2004 Před 4 lety +2

      Watch his other videos, He gets rid of it on most of the videos I've seen.

    • @46kvolt
      @46kvolt Před 4 lety +1

      Simple Man I scrolled through all the titles but didn’t see anything about VVT

    • @simpleman2004
      @simpleman2004 Před 4 lety

      He probably doesn't have any specific on VVT. Just on the cam swaps in the engines that have VVT, he removes the VVT. Thats what I should have said.

  • @qwertyword
    @qwertyword Před 3 lety +1

    Richard,
    Will drastically changing the compression ratio affect the measured AFR? WB O2 sensors work because there is always excess/unburned oxygen in the exhaust even when "rich". I would think a high compression ratio/a lot of squish would improve the charge mixture and burn more oxygen.
    Thank you.

    • @qwertyword
      @qwertyword Před 3 lety

      Also, I would say this is supported with the fact that BSFC is significantly reduced with increased compression ratio. But I love looking at data.

  • @shayestrx250r
    @shayestrx250r Před 3 lety

    So in therory my 1000hp capable engine and turbo (that I wanted to only make 800-850hp) is stuck making 700hp (because I had no intention on using E85, i.e. fuel system) on pump 93 unless I have a second 116 octane race gas tune for when I want to run race gas.