Here is what is amazing to me. None of the people with dynos will say 87 mph at 3600 pounds is way off from what 500 hp should run. Not a one of them. At some point, there’s just not a level of honesty. If that engine was never Dynoed, and some random guy on this site posted he had 500 horse that he guessed and ran 87 mph in the same scenario, he would be eaten alive by people stating he didn’t have close to 500 horse. But because he visited a Dyno, that engine cannot be challenged. You are an anti-Dino Matic if you dare challenge the Dino number. Which ironically, I have not I just said that’s not showing up at the track.
I already answered this Tim.
I’ve watched Joe’s videos of his stuff on the dyno. I know what they are doing I wouldn’t do.
You refuse to grasp what the numbers say coming off the dyno.
The issue with his engine is the bad testing protocol they use.
That’s not a dyno issue. The operator needs to change what he is doing.
I very rarely use dyno headers.
Why? Because I know how much power chassis headers CAN cost.
I’m betting you can piss 20 hp away just from the headers.
Did he use his ignition or the dyno ignition? That can be another 10-20.
What was the coolant temp on the dyno? I know guys test engines as cold as 130. I do performance stuff at 160 and street stuff at 180.
So if they tested at 160 and at the track Joe is 190 lop off another 25-30. If they tested at 130 then knock off some more.
I’ve posted all this already but you don’t get it.
I’m not going through the corrected and observed number again. Go back and read that.
It’s entirely expected if the testing went the way I thought it did that his engine in the chassis lost that kind of power.