Here is the dyno sheet for the 2054cc engine with carbs.
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The only change was the Carb was replace with the programable FI System.
This is a type 4 engine? A 2056?
No Type 1, just showing how with FI you get more power with the same engine.
a T-1 making 230HP???? am i missing something?
No Type1's make alot more power than type4 due to exhaust ports.
This is a daily driver 66 bug.
HOLY COW....don't they max out to 2056 or something.....it's on somebody's site....
If T1s make more power, why do so many people go with a T4 conversion? Am I missing something?
turbo?
QUOTE (Aaron Cox @ May 8 2005, 09:06 PM) |
turbo? |
i would bet that is a 10 k mile engine, i wonder what kind of case strengthing is done on a mag case to hadle that much power.
that motor must be at least 11 : 1 compression
only street car i know of that is NA & ,akes more than 100 hp a liter is the s2000 (lots of modern tech in it)
Yeah, I agree with scott. Its probably a drag motor or something running on race gas. Who else would dyno a bug motor?
edit: whoops, didnt see it was a daily driver. power to the nazi road oilers!
I'm willing to bet the difference wouldn't be as substantial on a stock or near stock motor......still a nice improvement.....figure $50 per horsepower if the FI cost $1500.....
no one is saying FI cannot give more HP, but you cannot claim 20-30% across the board on all applications.....
Jakes new heads I believe are going to be using the Type I exhaust style, those should be some awesome parts to get a hold of once available....
Golly, Honda, Ferrari, NASCAR, et al, have to spin their N/A motors to 9k to get more than 100 hp per liter.....what a bunch of clowns.
Mini Cooper S > 1598 cc = 168 hp @ 6000 rpm
QUOTE (v82go @ May 9 2005, 06:10 AM) |
Mini Cooper S > 1598 cc = 168 hp @ 6000 rpm |
Don't forget about the Toyota 4A-GZE motor. 1600cc motor that spins to the moon. That has a blower, and has a clutch on it so you can turn it on and off. Sounds like a good use for that FIdle circuit on Megasquirt.
Later,
Tom
I replaced this winter the FI system (stock D-jet)-injectors, TPS, CHT, MPS, throttle body, boots, vacuum hoses, trigger points, distributor breaker plate etc..
This Spring I have been replacing/updating the brakes and suspension on my '76 over the last 2 months; been sitting outside (but covered) all that time (including 2 blizzards). Saturday, for the first time in months, I decided to see if it would start so I could test drive it and seat the brake pads.
Turned the key, and it started instantly - no hesitation, no cranking, after 2 months of sitting it started like it had just been turned off.......
No carbs for me, thanks!
so steve, this dyno sheet is from one of your motors with *your* FI on it ???
Andy
Which ECU is, IMHO, not all that relevant, assuming any ECU can be tuned appropriately. What IS relevant to this particular comparison is the fact that carbs were swapped for throttle bodies. If you plot the two power curves on the same scale, you'll see that the difference in power rises as the revs rise. Under about 4000rpm, they make the same power. Above that, the EFI engine's curve rises away from the carb'd engines curve. This strongly suggests that the carbs used in the comparison were too small, and were flowing too little air at upper revs. The freer flowing throttle bodies kept flowing, so they produced more power at higher revs.
Jake's results show similar curves when layed atop each other. The divergence happens a tad earlier on those graphs (3500 rather than 4000), but it's still close.
This doesn't mean this is an unfair comparison. One of the advantages of EFI is that the effectiveness of the fuelling is decoupled from the air velocity through the throttle body. In a carb, if air velocity falls too much (carb too big), fuel control gets very erratic. So, an engine with big carbs tends to suffer from poor drivability, so for a daily driver, you tend to deliberately run carbs that are too small to keep good fuel control. In an EFI setup, flow velocity is irrelevant to fuel control (but NOT completely irrelevant to power), so you can run bigger throttle bodies with EFI and retain good drivability, thus getting the high rev benefits of big throats with none (or few) of the downsides).
If you used, say, 44IDFs with 36mm venturis, and compared them against 36mm throttle bodies, you'd see very similar power figures. Comparing 44IDFs with 50mm Jenvey throttle bodies is not an apples to apples comparison, even though a well-tuned EFI setup with those TBs would probably drive just as nicely as the same engine with well-tuned 44IDFs.
Sanity is restored. Now I understand how this 30% number is possible.
So, bolting aftermarket EFI onto a 914 engine using the stock intake plumbing will NOT give you a 20-30% power increase. It MAY help if you use a larger throttle body. Using a throttle body that flows more than the engine will take offers no help at all to power, and only makes the throttle action "jumpy", as you're changing the ratio of throttle pedal movement to airflow into the engine. Since it's very likely (but unconfirmed) that the stock throttle body is adequate for an otherwise stock 2.0, it's very unlikely adding a bigger one will help. So, you're not going to see much, if any, power increase by using any aftermarket ECU with an otherwise stock engine in place of an otherwise properly functioning D-Jet or L-Jet system. 5% is pretty much the outside, by simply cleaning up the fuel delivery a tad.
QUOTE |
so steve, this dyno sheet is from one of your motors with *your* FI on it ??? |
QUOTE (lapuwali @ May 9 2005, 12:49 PM) |
Which ECU is, IMHO, not all that relevant |
QUOTE (lapuwali @ May 9 2005, 03:49 PM) |
...One of the advantages of EFI is that the effectiveness of the fuelling is decoupled from the air velocity through the throttle body. |
QUOTE (Aaron Cox @ May 8 2005, 09:18 PM) |
only street car i know of that is NA & ,akes more than 100 hp a liter is the s2000 (lots of modern tech in it) |
1974 Carrera RSR - 3,0 liters, 320 HP.
30 years ago hi-tech...
QUOTE (ArtechnikA @ May 9 2005, 02:04 PM) | ||
not just EFI :-) |
QUOTE (ArtechnikA @ May 9 2005, 02:35 PM) |
1974 Carrera RSR - 3,0 liters, 320 HP. 30 years ago hi-tech... |
There's a guy on the Pelican 911 BBS that developed a Megasquirt based kit for the 911SC.
http://www.bitzracing.com/
He's claiming a 23hp increase over CIS. With SSI headers and Megasquirt he's 40hp above stock.
http://www.bitzracing.com/gallery/Tony_78_911SC.html
QUOTE (anthony @ May 9 2005, 02:59 PM) |
There's a guy on the Pelican 911 BBS that developed a Megasquirt based kit for the 911SC. http://www.bitzracing.com/ He's claiming a 23hp increase over CIS. With SSI headers and Megasquirt he's 40hp above stock. http://www.bitzracing.com/gallery/Tony_78_911SC.html |
It would have been nice if he had done back to back dyno tests. Still, he's produced a great figure with just SSIs and EFI. It puts him in 3.2L territory for a lot less money than an engine upgrade.
Anyway, I can't wait to see Jakes dyno figures for his 2056, 2270, 2316 motors with carbs and then with EFI.
QUOTE (jgiroux67 @ May 9 2005, 02:33 PM) | ||
2002 and up BMW M3 3.2- 3.3 liter and 333 hp stock Maclaren F1 6 liter 627hp Honda S2000 and I think the Integra GSR does as well |
They can do it with sbc's..... lol
Remember Jake being very impressed with Kit Carlesons EFI kit? I remember him being a skeptic, then completly converted after toying with the kit.
and yes, kit carleson efi is not avalible...
Andrew
QUOTE (SirAndy @ May 9 2005, 02:33 PM) | ||
i have to dis-agree. first, the ECU is only one part of the equation and second, if i was to fork out $2000 for a FI setup you better believe that i would want to see some dyno sheets with that particular setup installed on a comparable motor and not some graphs from a motor and injection system that has nothing at all to do with his product and engine. ok, so now we have general *proof* that FI can give you more HP than carbs, way cool, except, i'm a FI guy, i knew that all along. what does that say about steve's product? absolutely nothing! Andy |
one last road car number, for Porsche content:
Carrera GT - 5,7 liters, 612 HP
The only way to solve this debate is with some graphs... I did some testing today, will do more next week and so on and so forth. Now that the 16 channel data logger is here and all hooked up I can see everything clear as day and log it as well and even upload complete dyno runs.
As for the 2054 graph posted, I cut my teeth on TI engines and I'll say that is more than likely a Turboed engine, look at the torque...
I have 11 solid weeks of FI testing coming up starting week after next, during those 11 weeks I will log more data than anyone can imagine!
I was not super fond of FI until I worked with the Kit Carlson package and then experienced it.. After seeing the huge power gains that we saw in that testing I saw a huge and easy way to make my engines more powerful and better yet run even cooler. This alone opens up doors that are otherwise closed and allows more development to be done.... Hell, thats how the "Super 2 liter Plus" is going to make its goal of 50 MPG and 110 HP.... It'll be assembled in less than a month..
Just wait till you see the 2 liter 356 engine I'm building for LN Engineering........ Every modernization available, plus EFI and about 190 RELIABLE ponies.... Nuttin outflows the 356 head! (except my billet monsters)
50 mpg? I hate to be a skeptic... but I'll believe it when I see it. Modern engineers are struggling to make hybrid technology get 40 mph with under 100 hp.
Thats the goal- 50 MPG...
I have attained 40 from my 2056 in the 912E and that engine was not built for such a feat..
We are shooting for this as a challenge, the engine combination it will take to do it has been in development for 2 years in the heads of Len and I so we are throwing every trick we have at it.
I seriously think that some corrupt bastard in the gevernment thats an oil tycoon is keeping the development of super efficient engines down or something!
I will be happy if we get 40 MPG with the combination, but 50 is the goal... The gearing is being set up specifically to keep this baby at peak torque on the highway and the engine will run very cool with its DTM and etc and that will help. I am quite sure we can average 40 MPG with this baby when its all said and done especially with is long stroke, small bore and every friction reduction known to man from a Ion Nitrided crank to ceramic lifters to even DLC coated valves rockers, pushrod tips and oil pump gears.... Chris Foley is building a header specifically for the project as well.
BTW- Those engineers aren't very effective most of the time!
QUOTE (MattR @ May 9 2005, 10:39 PM) |
Modern engineers are struggling to make hybrid technology get 40 mph with under 100 hp. |
QUOTE (Mueller @ May 9 2005, 05:25 PM) |
any of the commercially available (and even the Megasquirt) electronic fuel injection ECU's can attain the same level of HP numbers if all the hard parts are the same (throttle bodies/injectors) |
QUOTE |
i believe that an efficient engine is a clean engine, but nobody has been talking about making aircooled engines meet 2010 emissions standards. |
QUOTE |
how can you use someone elses dyno-sheet as proof that your injection system is worth $2000 bucks? |
QUOTE (Jake Raby @ May 9 2005, 07:55 PM) |
... The gearing is being set up specifically to keep this baby at peak torque on the highway ... |
The peak torque is the point where any engine has the best BSFC if it is tuned correctly.. This means that if we get our peak torque at 3K RPM I should set up the gearbox to live the desired cruise speed in each upper gear at that point.... This takes the most advantage of the gearing.
You can try it with a cop and see- might work..
QUOTE (scott thacher @ May 9 2005, 09:14 PM) | ||
not trying to high jack just a crazy question, that i know is wrong.... my fifth gear torque peak is at 4500 rmps with about 165 fp, which happens to be 115 or so mph. does this mean my best fuel usage will be at 115 mph... if so cool i might try to that on a cop if i ever get caught at that speed and jake i am not arguing with you just using your post for the words |
Or shorter rear tires...........
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