Basically you're telling half the story if you kept timing the same for all the runs. Yes, if you don't have the power to change your ignition settings, you can try to run on the lean side to try and pick up some power. You have a few degrees of freedom on how to control the speed of the flame front and cylinder pressure. If you lean the mixture, you increase the flame front speed which can lead to more power.
However you should really tune for best torque at each of these AFR's and see which one will net you the most overall power. With this information you paint a more complete picture of the VE's response to timing and fuel
I agree with stock motors yes. The stock internal motors make good power with the lean mixtures.
But once the cr goes up like in mid 12 I have realized that they make more power with richer mixtures. I gained power on my high cr motor from going from 13:1 down to the mid 12:1 afrs..
Originally Posted by danmartin Are you using stock ignition tables?
Basically you're telling half the story if you kept timing the same for all the runs. Yes, if you don't have the power to change your ignition settings, you can try to run on the lean side to try and pick up some power. You have a few degrees of freedom on how to control the speed of the flame front and cylinder pressure. If you lean the mixture, you increase the flame front speed which can lead to more power.
However you should really tune for best torque at each of these AFR's and see which one will net you the most overall power. With this information you paint a more complete picture of the VE's response to timing and fuel