Don't take this wrong way but just about all of your questions have been discussed on various threads.
But let me try to answer your questions:
1. A pulley is on the supercharger the end nearest the passenger comparment. By changing its size, in this case making it smaller, it spins up quicker as well as spinning faster to produce more power. If made too small it spins too fast, produces excess heat and can create major headaches.
2. Changed belt - if you change the pulley you need to re-size the belt in this case a tad larger than stock.
3. Gutted cats - mean that the cat is removed from the car, the insides removed, including baffles, and placed back on the car. According to SVT this is the biggest flow restirctor on the engine.
4.. Reflash - may involve what you are discussing or other settings including boost level of the supercharger, rpm settings, timing, fuel tables, etc. Simply put its re-programming the computer that controls the engine management systems.
5. He may have been reflashing or doing something else.
6. There are two ratings for power and torque. First the advertised numbers are taken at the crank or flywheel. Second is commonly referred to at the wheels (rear wheels in the case opf a rear wheel drive car). This number is determined by placing the car on a chassis dyno or pulling the engine and placing it on an engine dyno. Due to drive train loss, etc. the #'s at the wheels are generally 15 +/-% lower than the advertised or crank numbers.
Ford advertises 550 HP, the car does 550 at the wheels (RWHP). 550 RWHP converted to flywheel or crank HP is calcualted by 550 / .85 (assumes 15% loss) = 647 HP at the crank versus the 550 advertised. If a 12.5% loss factor is used the numbers are as follows 550/.875= 629 HP at the crank. So yes you are correct Ford has learned their lessons after the Mustang fiasco.
Always calcuate back to flywheel and don't use the fadvertised / flywheel number and subtract 12.5-15% for a manual car.
A stock GT does 550/55 RWHP. Keep in mind that for acceleration the torque figures are far more important. The GT produces huge torque immediately and keeps it to red-line without dropping. This is what makes the car so quick.
Hope this provides you with some information that is useful. Others may correct or amend what I have posted.
Thank you for your candor.
bitzman said:
I drive old tech cars so am not current with all the latest lingo or reasons for doing things.
May I ask a couple questions:
pulley--what does that do?
changed belt--what's the improvement on the new belt?
gutted cats--best not discuss that, I get the idea
"re-flashed computer" Does this mean setting certain points higher like fuel flow rate per minute? I am not familiar with the word "flash"
I saw a guy with a Pantera --Pat Mical of Future Auto--in a Pantera converted to EFI sitting there with a laptop recalibrating his fuel injection, was he "reflashing?"
So the good news is that rear wheel dyno reading of 580-595 confirms the hints that the car puts out over the advertised hp.with a little tweaking. This is better than when Ford put out a Mustang Cobra a few years ago that produced less than the adv. hp. and had to send out a kit to enable owners to reach the adv. hp.
Thanks for any elucidations,