Ed is quite the stud muffin....
0 Members and 5 Guests are viewing this topic.
these are probably the same type of responses that car manufacturers got when going to EFI.
Norbs - Give us the pros and cons, when and why to switch, total cost, driveability.
seems to me that if one wants to get his money's worth out of an aftermarket system, then one must not only be able to learn how to use it, he must have access to a dyno. Otherwise, the cost of paying for dyno time and a tuner is going to add a lot to the cost and that is never mentioned by these guys selling these things.And, if one gets it to run on the street as well as the factory ecm, I suspect it will not pass a comprehensive emissions test if that has to be performed annually.I still laugh when I remember the renowned tuner that was blasting the use of an ME chip on a particular TSM car when he could easily get two more tenths with an XFI. It took many months before he got the car to go faster than it was with the chip. There have been several guys run in the mid 8's with a chip. Now, I agree with Ed, if I were building a race car that running in the Nines, or quicker, I would go aftermarket if for no other reason than more flexibility with timing and individual cylinder tuning. But, then with a race car, I would be looking for hundreths, not tenths, , and absolute repeatibility run to run. On the track, a race car runs a very narrow rpm band and launches at very high rpm. This makes the basic tuning relatively simple and I suspect most of the gains will come in low gear trying to get it to launch optimally and consistently.On the street, one is concerned with a much broader rpm band and many degrees of throttle rather than foot on the floor. Gas mileage, emissions, cold weather performance, hot weather performance, variation in gasoline quality, etc. all have to be accounted for. It is hard to beat a modern chip/stock ecm when it comes to street performance. Self learning certainly helps, but, sometimes it seems to work better than others. There is enuf variation between cars and combos to confound the issue.And, echoing Ed and Dan, how many people will put in the time and effort to learn the hows and whys of tuning? Think how many people buy a programmable chip and cannot even read the instructions to program the simplest of functions even when there may only be six things that can be adjusted. Most people that are buying these things today are not car guys. They don't understand timing, fueling, basic electrical systems, etc. How many posts do we see that go something like, "My car won't start; what should I buy?" Vendors love them because they can sell them magical parts to solve their problems.On the other hand, I keep looking at modern aftermarket systems to install on my Challenger...b ut, when I look at the prices, the calculator in my head keeps saying, "Buy a modern hemi and drop it in there...."No matter what your flavor, nothing beats fuel injection on the street
Quote from: daveismissing on May 17 2012, 08:39:13 AMNorbs - Give us the pros and cons, when and why to switch, total cost, driveability. ..... I did hear him say that for the faint of heart, or people that do not have a laptop...... he has it set up as self learning right outa the box. Just gotta drive around with it for a while and it will adjust automatically.