Interesting video. That is a whole different world. I haven't ever done a boosted motor on the dyno. The power numbers are crazy. 90% of what I do is less than 1/2 those power numbers. Only now since it's been pointed out to me that you can't develop a timing curve with a sweep on a dyno should I be skeptical of all the testing they did of being valid? I noticed they used sweeps to evaluate timing and fuel changes and no steady srate testing was done.
I need to watch the video but Steve Morris is a serial offender on timing. You can watch dozens of his videos where he puts more timing in it and it picks up peak numbers but around peak torque it hurts it.
So yes, he jacks it up. I could say more but I won’t but I will say this. There are some who refuse to learn of who don’t even consider that their tuning has an issue. Some engines are ultra sensitive to timing and others are not.
A Pontiac for example is hyper sensitive to timing. It’s far less forgiving than most engines. A SBC with 60-70’s iron heads will run anywhere between 38-44 depending on how the engine is configured. So watching a video and watching someone else do sweep tests for timing doesn’t make it correct.
Go watch the whole series of videos he did on the Noonan Hemi going in the Bonneville car. They did at least short sweeps on that as they were doing timing for EACH GEAR. I think it was a 10 speed and they didn’t do pulls for 8-10 because…I forget what Morris said.
In THAT case it would be insane to try and load several THOUSAND horsepower steady state and work a curve. You’d be pulling the engine every 20 pulls or so to change the rods. That would be idiotic so you do what you can do.
Morris also produced a video about how a change in compression ratio or boost (or both I suppose) and the timing requirement (he says) doesn’t change! And he was serious. If you don’t grasp how wrong that is I don’t know what to say. There is a reason that vacuum advance was (and still is) used and Thats because LOAD affects timing. Less load = more timing. Thats basic **** and yet Morris either ignores it or doesn’t get it.
As I said, your own testing is telling you that engine wants a curve. Why not try it? What have you got to lose?
Put a curve in it based on your sweep testing and see what happens. Then do some steady state test and see what the engine wants for a curve that way. Do that carve and see which curve makes more power.
You might learn something.















