


Has anyone else had this happen or tested it too?
Moderators: IMOC Moderators, IMOC Committee Members
sheppy wrote:did you dyno the car yourself when you got the 445bhp sheet? That's what I'm getting at as I know where the car came from..
.
.
ashley wrote:sheppy wrote:did you dyno the car yourself when you got the 445bhp sheet? That's what I'm getting at as I know where the car came from..
.
.
Surely you're not implying that the original dyno graph(supplied by the car builder) might not be accurate?
![]()
I wouldn't get too hung up on it..
.as the OP has stated a few times- the car feels more than fast enough for him, so no biggy.
I would be curious to rerun on the dyno with traction control switched off though for a genuine like for like comparison.
.
.
jimGTS wrote:quite frankly im amazed youd go to a dyno and choose to have the TRC on and not do a couple of runs with it off.![]()
![]()
raptor95GTS wrote:sometimes the obvious is only apparent after the event.Maybe one is crank and one is wheel power, maybe different boost levels but aye something is very different with those outputs
Nic wrote:The RLTC takes the signal from each wheel ABS sensor, on a dyno the front wheels are not turning so the RLTC would think the rear wheels are spinning(it compares the speed of each wheel to work out if one or more wheels are losing traction) and would aggressively cut the fueling to each injector.
If it cuts one injector per cycle then that would be something like a 25% drop in power.
![]()
Doing a dyno run with the RLTC on will never give you anything like a true hp reading.RLTC is very good on the road, not on a dyno.