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Going to Dyno -any pointers?


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Finally taking car to dyno with an LSx specialist. Gonna get baseline and any additional power he can give me. Also gonna tune out as much throttle run-on as I can to get car to compression brake better for autocrossing. Any other pointers? I've never been to a dyno shop before. May13 is the big day.

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Try to make sure you have a constant supply of cool air to the intake, and if you can, monitor the intake air temp and make sure that it's stabilized and as close to the same temperature as possible at the beginning of each run.  That last part is probably more applicable for turbos but in general should apply for naturally aspirated as well.  If your intake air temps are not consistent run to run you can really start chasing your tail trying to make adjustments.

 

If the dyno is indoors make sure it's well ventillated - you don't want to start diluting your intake air with exhaust fumes!

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I've got lousy stock Datsun gauges, so I'm gonna have to have the operator monitor them, then mark my gauges with sharpies in lieu of gauge replacement (for now).  Last time to the strip, my H2O temp gauge said 240, wfritts911 plugged his little box into my data port and found the H2O temp to be 205. I know where normal temp is and I know where it runs when doing a lot of full-power driving, but I don't know where DANGER HOT- OH CRAP SHUT IT DOWN FAST hot is.  I'm gonna go thru the drivetrain with a torque wrench and double check all my fasteners before I go too.

 

Are there particular maneuvers he will likely have me do, or just warm it up, get it into 4th gear and nail it?

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Make sure your fuel pressure stays up at high rpm-if not you are paying dyno time for a problem you missed .I am guilty of this.In a powerful car on the street this is hard to catch.Its cheaper to learn from other peoples mistakes..The dyno will find all the weakness in your set up.

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I've got lousy stock Datsun gauges, so I'm gonna have to have the operator monitor them, then mark my gauges with sharpies in lieu of gauge replacement (for now).  Last time to the strip, my H2O temp gauge said 240, wfritts911 plugged his little box into my data port and found the H2O temp to be 205. I know where normal temp is and I know where it runs when doing a lot of full-power driving, but I don't know where DANGER HOT- OH CRAP SHUT IT DOWN FAST hot is.  I'm gonna go thru the drivetrain with a torque wrench and double check all my fasteners before I go too.

 

Are there particular maneuvers he will likely have me do, or just warm it up, get it into 4th gear and nail it?

Do you know what kind of dyno it is? If its a Mustang then you might be trying tuning individual load points.  If its a DynoJet, then you'll likely just do full-throttle pulls in 4th, which is still useful, but requires you to do part-throttle load points on your own.

 

I'm assuming that if you intend to do tuning that you will be logging engine controller data during each run, as well as the dyno data, correct?  Do you already have a wideband O2 sensor that you can log?  

 

If you do end up doing load points, then its especially important to keep air temps consistent as I mentioned before, both during each load point and from load point to load point, as well as watching coolant temps.  Also, pay attention to the actual intake air temperature for the session and if you find that the engine runs differently once you are on the street, check see if there is a difference in the air temps causing it.

Edited by TimZ
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I don't understand the last two posts ,SUNNYZ and Dans Toy (?).  Is that the results of your dyno testing or is that your guesses of what I'm making?  I bet I'm not making any more than factory, minus the accessories (AC and PS and underdrive pulley that came with the motor), maybe less for my poorly designed, but tight fitting, exhaust.  I think my good 1/8 mile times are just a result of the slicks and the 2-step allowing me to let it rip without having to be a good driver/clutch man.  The variation of reaction times and mphs show the truth about the driver.  I'm eager to get back to the strip, but the next racing opportunity is autocross, so I'm staying set up for that (rear camber/tires).

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