FFS 1.6 actually a success
#1
FFS 1.6 actually a success
http://www.fastforwardsuperchargers....2684#post12684
Cliffs with a JR BTC and mp62 elepha put down at 9 psi
153 whp and 130 lb/ft with a very healthy torque curve maybe this will wake up all those m45 people to get a real blower.
dont hot link from ffs.
Cliffs with a JR BTC and mp62 elepha put down at 9 psi
153 whp and 130 lb/ft with a very healthy torque curve maybe this will wake up all those m45 people to get a real blower.
dont hot link from ffs.
#14
yes, it always starts with some interesting FFS dyno and most likely ends with a cracked engine few months later ...
just ask jmann, a customer of his from miataforum with two blown engines. someone had posted links to his miataforum quotes in the B/S section here. i've heard he is not alone though, but there is a solid number of FFS Coldsides in his area with popped engines gathering for a mourning ...
just ask jmann, a customer of his from miataforum with two blown engines. someone had posted links to his miataforum quotes in the B/S section here. i've heard he is not alone though, but there is a solid number of FFS Coldsides in his area with popped engines gathering for a mourning ...
http://www.fastforwardsuperchargers....2684#post12684
Cliffs with a JR BTC and mp62 elepha put down at 9 psi
153 whp and 130 lb/ft with a very healthy torque curve maybe this will wake up all those m45 people to get a real blower.
Cliffs with a JR BTC and mp62 elepha put down at 9 psi
153 whp and 130 lb/ft with a very healthy torque curve maybe this will wake up all those m45 people to get a real blower.
Last edited by gazurtoid; 02-09-2008 at 05:03 PM.
#16
My M45 coldside only dyno'd at 162, that was the Bipes and AFPR running the smaller pulley (~10 psi).
I ditched the Bipes and AFPR, added MS and re-engineered the pulley setup (it now will hit and hold 12psi) There was a ton of slip with the original setup.
On the CS setup, the blower just sits on a plenum (looks like a ghetto turbo manifold) the only way to use an IC would be to re-engineer the manifold...
Of course there's always twincharged...
The car runs smoother, but my butt dyno still thinks it's about the same HP wise.
#17
a fresh example that a yo-yo wacko shouldn't be let touch engines. not even with a ten foot pole:
http://www.fastforwardsuperchargers....6&postcount=14
what?? bollocks! different weight wheels, some heavy baggage in the boot, different road slope all change the engine load in a similar way. either his fueling computer has eyes and reacts differently to same load changes depending on the sight just to make your life harder. or he has to retune it every time he starts climbing a mountain or puts baggage in the boot because it can't handle load changes right ...
yes, load changes when you drive around. that is why when you tune engine on the dyno, you drive the dyno to cause the engine/computer to go through all the load rows in the tables and tune the cells one by one. then when you're done and the engine is running properly, for a particular load change it uses the same cell from the table, regardless if that load change was caused by a slipping transmission, transmission change or the car driving downhill - engine runs the same because the only thing it experiences is the load amount, not what caused it ...
seems at FFS there is always an excuse generator running 24/7, generating B/S excuses to every situation
that yo-yo chap is some special case
next time he should spend some time generating more sophisticated excuses which don't reveal his lack of engine tuning knowledge ...
Originally Posted by Tom @ Fast Forward
It does appear to run a touch rich above 6000 RPM. That could be easily due to the addition of a torque converter to the 'load' on the engine as the PC-Pro computes fuel required based on RPM, Boost and load. Clutches don't have any 'slip'.
what?? bollocks! different weight wheels, some heavy baggage in the boot, different road slope all change the engine load in a similar way. either his fueling computer has eyes and reacts differently to same load changes depending on the sight just to make your life harder. or he has to retune it every time he starts climbing a mountain or puts baggage in the boot because it can't handle load changes right ...
yes, load changes when you drive around. that is why when you tune engine on the dyno, you drive the dyno to cause the engine/computer to go through all the load rows in the tables and tune the cells one by one. then when you're done and the engine is running properly, for a particular load change it uses the same cell from the table, regardless if that load change was caused by a slipping transmission, transmission change or the car driving downhill - engine runs the same because the only thing it experiences is the load amount, not what caused it ...
seems at FFS there is always an excuse generator running 24/7, generating B/S excuses to every situation
that yo-yo chap is some special case
next time he should spend some time generating more sophisticated excuses which don't reveal his lack of engine tuning knowledge ...