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Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec
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TOPIC: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14274

  • RacerX
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Sterling Doc wrote:

Dan found the HP, and I hope more guys do with dyno testing. He has my low compression motor from last year, which was a serious effort at making a LC motor competitive. Many solid motors just don't have that potential, and are stuck where Dan is, w/o an expensive rebuild.


If I understand this correctly.....even guys with good solid motors won't be able to make 138HP?
Then why 138 with a 140 cap?? Why not 136 with a 138 cap or even a little lower, say 135 with a 137 cap?? Something that everyone would be able to attain without such a "serious effort"?? That serious effort sounds like serious $$$$$.
Ken Frey #3 944-Spec MW Region

"Racing is life! Anything that happens before or after is just waiting."

Check out my build thread!!
www.944-spec.org/944SPEC/forum/race-car-...d/9155-new-car-build
Last Edit: 12 years, 1 month ago by RacerX.

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14275

  • AgRacer
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RacerX wrote:
Sterling Doc wrote:

Dan found the HP, and I hope more guys do with dyno testing. He has my low compression motor from last year, which was a serious effort at making a LC motor competitive. Many solid motors just don't have that potential, and are stuck where Dan is, w/o an expensive rebuild.


If I understand this correctly.....even guys with good solid motors won't be able to make 138HP?
Then why 138 with a 140 cap?? Why not 136 with a 138 cap or even a little lower, say 135 with a 137 cap?? Something that everyone would be able to attain without such a "serious effort"?? That serious effort sounds like serious $$$$$.


As I understand it, the number was decided upon based on where the majority of the cars lie on the power output. I believe they are assuming that the bell curve average of cars all across the country to be in the 135-136 HP range. In order to capture the vast majority of the cars without impact, they chose a cap just above where the vast majority sit on that bell curve. Additionally, I think they understand that there will be further progression in output as people get more effecient at massaging these motors together. I believe this to affect only a very few of us but in time, the class will get better at tuning/building to that number.
J. Stanley
NASA-SE Region 944 Spec Series Director
Yellow #60

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14276

  • cbuzzetti
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Eric, my mistake I assumed that you were listing the 1,2&3 place cars.

As far as the video goes I was pointing out that better corner exit speed will look like HP. Alot of drivers will make an asuumption that the guy driving away from them on corner exit is HP when it is most likely better car set up and driving skill.

I am stating this as a driver who has seen and been on both sides of this situation.

It is good to see this many drivers voicing their opinion on this subject.
2018 NASA 944Spec National Champ
2018 NASA ST5 P2 944 Nationals COTA
2017 NASA 944Spec WSC P3
2016 NASA PTD-944 WSC P2
2015 NASA GTS1 Western Champion
2014 NASA 944Spec Western Champion
2013 NASA 944Spec So-Cal Regional Champion
2013 NASA 944Spec National P3
2010 NASA GTS-1 National Champion
2010 NASA 944Spec National P3
2010 NASA So-Cal 944Spec Regional Champion
2009 NASA 944Spec National Champion

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14277

  • joeblow
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cbuzzetti wrote:
Hi Eric, are the numbers below for the 09-10 Miller Nationals numbers that you got from Ryan or are these numbers from the internet? If the 143 number shown is one you got from me or from a post I made that was from 2010 At Buttonwillow before Nationals and should not be used he as a comparrison. That same car at Nationals at Miller dynoed at 137. I was using this as a comparison for variations in dynos.

This was also a car that had a head on it that became illegal after Nationals based on the head thickness rule. I installed a Milledge head after Nationals to keep in compliance with the new rules for heads. The car HP did not change.

I am also unclear about the HP ratings for the 2012 Nats. You have 141, 140.5 and 136 listed. In a post made today you are quoting smaller numbers for your car. Please clarify.

Thanks,

Sterling Doc wrote:
Charlie, I'll do my best. I was not at Miller, and did not see every dyno there, so those years are less clear.

2007 - 137, 135 (few dynos done)
2008 - 139 (first "pro-built" motor), 137 (still few dynos, second pro built motor blew up before tested)
2009, 2010 (Miller) 143, 139 (may be others)
2011 - 139, 138, 135
2012 - 141, 140.5, 136

With Nationals back at Miller, we expect a bigger turnout, and a bigger number of highly tuned cars for 2013.

This only represent cars that showed up at Nationals, not all the dynos we see and evaluate.

What question do have on the formula?
At the suggestion of John Brown, I changed how it was typed to be more mathematically correct, but it should be clear.


Altitude.
Altitude is an important factor that most of us ignore, yet it affects the engine’s performance possibly more than any other element. The general formula for power loss with increases in altitude is 3 percent for every 1,000 feet above sea level. If you race in Colorado at 5,000 feet instead of in California at sea level, you can expect to lose about 15 percent of the engine’s potential power output, if the engine is tuned properly.
Air is thinner at higher altitudes, which means there’s less fuel-burning oxygen than at sea level. You might sense a common theme here: less air (oxygen) means less fuel to maintain the proper air/fuel ratio. So, running at higher altitudes requires a leaner mixture setting than running at sea level.

So if you were making 137 at 4000ft altitude well then you are making really big power at sea level.
Old Racer!

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14279

SAE correction does attempt to correct for altitiude. In raw numbers, Charlie's car was making a lot less than 137 HP at Miller (on that dyno run). Our cars altitude correction is primitive, at best, and major changes throw the cars out of tune. Re-tuning is easier than changing jets on a carb, but not automatic & precise like modern EFI systems. Our cars are 25+ years old now!

Ag Racer - well said

Charlie - its all good, we're just getting deep in the weeds. I get your point on corner exit speed. Some day, it would be interesting to sit down with data.

What I'm really liking in this thread is all the enthusiasm for getting back to Nationals!
Eric Kuhns

National Director Emeritus

2007, & 2008 National Champion
2011, 2012 2nd
Last Edit: 12 years, 1 month ago by Sterling Doc.

Re: Dyno Cap for 2013 944 Spec 12 years, 1 month ago #14285

  • cbuzzetti
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It would be awesome to see 25+ cars at Miller again.
2018 NASA 944Spec National Champ
2018 NASA ST5 P2 944 Nationals COTA
2017 NASA 944Spec WSC P3
2016 NASA PTD-944 WSC P2
2015 NASA GTS1 Western Champion
2014 NASA 944Spec Western Champion
2013 NASA 944Spec So-Cal Regional Champion
2013 NASA 944Spec National P3
2010 NASA GTS-1 National Champion
2010 NASA 944Spec National P3
2010 NASA So-Cal 944Spec Regional Champion
2009 NASA 944Spec National Champion
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