Originally Posted by
cory Yeah your right. std means nothing. sae will take air temps, pressure and ect into account for your numbers..
There is nothing wrong with using STD. It will also take temperature, pressure, humidity, and altitude into consideration. STD use different factors is all.
SAE Factors are: 77* F, 29.23 barometric pressure, 0 humidity, 0 altitude
STD: 60* F, 29.92 pressure, 0 humidity, 0 altitude
DIN: 68* F, 29.23 pressure, 0 humidity, 0 altitude
What this all means is you will get higher # using STD correction factors. We have been saying this for awhile but the Florida people don't think it applies to them.
This guy says it better:
Official GTAMC Forums - SAE .vs. STD Dyno Numbers