How much horsepower did he lose? And what is wrong with the truck??? Wallace says I have 344 horse. But my truck is heavier than Joe’s. So maybe Wallace is wrong on mine and I really have 470 hp. My argument is more solid than yours above. Because Joe and I are racing identical trucks, except his is lighter than mine, a short bed. We almost have identical gearing, same transmission, he would have a little better torque converter than I, cutting the same wind, so I could argue that mine has 470 hp by your reasoning and be more correct. So let me write the book right now for the cheapest, simplest, 470 hp 360 on earth.
I’ve laid out all the reasons why his engine would be down on power but I’ll say this again with this caveat.
If the engine in question is one I saw this morning then the correction factor was MINUS about 3%. So are you grasping that yet?
I saw the dyno screen and the correction factor was MINUS. That means the weather was so good at the time they made the test the engine MADE MORE POWER than the STP correction factor would say.
So it subtracts POWER from the CORRECTED number so it. Now it lines up with the Standard Temperature and Pressure correction factor.
So let’s say the weather was **** the day they tested. That means the OBSERVED brake power number would be LOWER than the corrected brake power number.
You keep complaining the dyno is wrong, but you have virtually no concept of what observed and corrected power means.
Because an engine makes *** power corrected means that it made LESS than *** observed (uncorrected) power.
The dyno is Not wrong. Your understanding of how they work and why the numbers are corrected is wrong.
I may say piss on it and do a video to explain this but buy the time I got done everyone would think they were insulted and they’d be pissed off about it.
Ill end with this.
It doesn’t matter whether you look at the observed number or the corrected number, the engine will ONLY make that power when the weather conditions match.
That’s why a correction factor is used. So you can test year around and know if the engine made (or lost) power regardless of the weather.
I have weather changes at my house that happen so fast if there was no correction factor used I wouldn’t know if I made or lost power.
So all the data is corrected to some STANDARD. If it’s J607 (60 degrees, 29.92 barometer and 0 humidity) that’s what it corrects to.
There are other correction factors but I don’t remember exactly what they are but the principle.
If you don’t understand that you’ll never know why the dyno isn’t lying because it’s not.