Coheed, I hate to do this to your thread, but excuse me while I defend my e-manhood here for a second. =/
There will be good info about inlet air temps if you read to the end.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 hmmmmmmmm..............how long and how many cars have you tunedWell, I'm not exactly sure how long the cars were that I tuned, but I've tuned four of them.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 in what kind of building, with what kind of airflow, with what kind of dyno??????I've tuned countless hours on the street, in a typical garage complex with multiple bays with floor mounted Mustang dyno, in a warehouse building with excellent ventilation and surface mounted Dyno Dynamics machine.
The garage complex had open doors on the front and rear of the car with typical high flow fans aimed at the front of the car. The warehouse place had a dedicated exhaust fan in the ceiling along with and open bay door with typical large fans pointed at the front of the car.
The street had terrific air flow, probably the best you can wish for.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 Than talk to me........ I'm not really sure if you're calling me out as a novice, or if your grasp of the English language is poor. I'm guessing both?
Originally Posted by
sniper571 Its easy to avoid detonation on the street........please answer my qestion of how you are listening to this detonation??????I've used knock sensors along with Coheed's wall technique (works amazingly) as well as just listening. One could also employ the coffee can technique, or a more sophisticated electronic version of that same technique if one wished while on the street.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 ON THE STREET.....
Yep.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 K yep your intake temps are the primary cause of detonation......riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiightI never said they were. They are, however, the big difference between driving on the street and pulling on the dyno. You can knock on the dyno, and then drive home with none. Or, let me put it another way. You can tune knock out on the dyno and then have an even larger margin of safety by driving on the street.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 Lets just forget about the whole boost, timing, a/f and such. I certainly understand the importance of intake temps, but you will never be able to properly tune a car to zero detonation on the streets......I don't know how to refute this. For one, it's just stupid to say. You don't think I could tune a car to avoid detonation by just street tuning? Are you serious? Also, I've done this before, as have countless other tuners. Dynos are nice, but there's nothing magical about them that removes detonation from engine operation.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 somewhat pending on the car and what your tuning with mind you, but in most cases....never.Really, this is your problem here. If you'd just said it was hard to do, we'd be friends, but you've gone and said "never". I find it funny how you qualify the statement by saying "in most cases" but then go on to say "never". C'mon man, no one's buying this.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 Especially with a JWT chip,A JWT ECU is a non-tunable ECU. Of course you can't avoid detonation with it. Street vs. Dyno means nothing here.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 I have heard plenty of those detonate with 20lbs thrown at them. I believe it. Ever heard Coheed's car? This is my point. Just because you cater to complete idiots (90% of dyno customers are idiots) who think they aren't detonating on the street when they are doesn't mean Coheed can't tell when his car is and isn't detonating on the street. It also doesn't mean that just because your customers' cars detonate on the dyno that they were lying or don't know what they're talking about when they say they weren't detonating on the street. The dyno is a much more stressful place for an engine than the street due to limited air flow, and can be made worse by loaded dynos (Mustang and Dyno Dynamics). Like you said, the Dyno Dynamics can put a lot of load on the car, but you failed to mention that it typically puts
more load on the engine than the street. They are designed to allow the engine to accelerate at a set rate, no matter what. This means the more power a car has the more load it will place on the engine. The net effect on the street would be like doubling or tripling the mass or your car. Sorry, I'm getting way to deep into this. Let me continue.
I tune my car. Why do you ask?
Originally Posted by
sniper571 Answer my first questions and we shall go from there......Done.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 On our dynodynamics we can load the car pretty heavily to simulate street driving, still not as loaded as actual street drivingIt depends on how fast you're allowing the dyno/engine to accelerate. You can make it less load, the same load, or more load than the street. From what I've seen, the typical thing to do is allow for a rate of change of 200-300 rpm per second. This has the result of loading a car with more than about 300 WHP with more load than it would see on the street.
Originally Posted by
sniper571 215* is not insane either
215°F intake air temp is INSANE. When intake air temps are more than 60°F above ambient you've got major problems with compressor inefficiency, insufficient intercooler performance, etc. Pump gas can't deal with this sort of situation. Detonation will be the name of the game here. Coheed, you've got to do something about this. Is this typical of the SR20 crowd?
Originally Posted by
sniper571 But there are specific ways to listen that only a dyno will allow that are far more accurate than the street.Name me one thing you can do to listen for detonation that you can do on a dyno but not on the street.