I am thinking about having some dyno work done on my GT as part of a custom tune. For those of you that have done this, can you give me an idea of the cost range for custom tuning.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks in advance.
I am thinking about having some dyno work done on my GT as part of a custom tune. For those of you that have done this, can you give me an idea of the cost range for custom tuning.
Thanks in advance.
Most dynos are 180 mph, some are 200 mph. Even a 180 mph is no problem since you are running in 4th and will not hit 200 on the dyno.
You need a machine that can add resistance and adjust for speed (as the GT is a 200+ mph car). Make sure your shop has the latest Dyno equipment AND knows how to use it.
Let us know what you get. Heffner's pully and tune worked well for me.
Unless your car was tuned on another dyno, the Dyno-jet curves you posted were generated on a machine that cannot vary load as you described.
DoctorV8 said:Furthermore, relying on a "mail order tune," even from a reputable forum vendor, may be safe, but not necessary optimal. The last GT I saw dyno'd with a mail order pulley/tune was pig rich, ie <10:1. Picked up another 25 rwhp by leaning it out to 12.5:1 on a Dyno-jet, which allows plenty of margin for real world issues like wind resistance.
cobra1339 said:The AF on the graph looks a little leaner than what I have noticed on some other pulley tunes. Do you know where they picked up the AF from? ( Pipe or 02 bung), any tweaking on it or is that a 93 octane tune?. Just curious
because the GT is so aerodynamic
:thumbsup
A GT has a cD of approximately .40 which is not that aero. A C5 Vette, non-Z06, has a cD of .29. The new LS460 Lexus (yes the big 4 door sedan) has a cD of .26.
:cheers
Dave
Thanks for the numbers. Any idea what the frontal area of these cars are?
Ice
Unfortunately not.
Dave
A GT has a cD of approximately .40 which is not that aero. A C5 Vette, non-Z06, has a cD of .29. The new LS460 Lexus (yes the big 4 door sedan) has a cD of .26.
:cheers
Dave
Wow that is impressive. I wonder why the discrepancy? What kind of cD do race cars usually contend with?
found this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automobile_drag_coefficients
nice list of cars to look at.
Some companies demand better aero than others for many reasons. What looks sleek is not always sleek.
and Cd is not the end all of "sleek". Hence the GTs ability to do 212 (without the limiter) with ~510rwhp.
That is because in spite of the high CD it has a smaller cross section than most cars, together it isn't that bad. Now, if the same engine and chassis was optimized for a low drage the car would go even faster. However it would look much different that the 60's GT40.