It's not just one. That's just the one I sent you that I had the documentation handy. I not saying that some race engines couldn't benefit from a curve. I'm saying not all will. Some might benefit alot and some very little and most if they will benefit it is after peak horsepower at the very top of the rpm range. This is what my testing has shown me. I'm not the only one either. I talk to other dyno operators who see the same thing.
Yes, you keep saying that over and over. So far you still haven't explained how. Or shown where this has even been discussed before. You said it was in the superflow manual but that turned out to be about jetting not timing.
I provided the dyno sheets but you just dismiss them.
I would prefer to use a locked distributor to do this but I can do it with a curve also. I lay the curves over each other. If I know what the timing is and the power at each rpm Increment I can chose the timing amount that produces the most power for each rpm and develop a curve. The same way the engine will experience it. In a natural sweep
Ok, I’ll start from the top.
I’m not surprised you aren’t finding any power on some engines with a curve. And I don’t doubt that the other dyno operators you talk to say the same thing.
I’ll drop a Tuner story here, because he has been dealing with this far longer than I have.
Tuner had an engine on a local builders dyno. I forget but IIRC it was a BBC going in some boat.
And Tuner wanted to do steady state testing to develop a curve for it so he could find out what it wanted and put the curve in the distributor.
The dyno guy said absolutely not for two reasons. One was he didn’t like steady state testing because it’s not what the engine “sees” when running (for the most part that’s true but some places like Daytona they pretty much flat foot it around there) and he wouldn’t let Tuner move the distributor around while the engine was loaded on the dyno.
Tuner told him that if he has to do it in the boat he has to sit right next to the engine and turn the distributor while looking at the vacuum gauge and listening to the engine. He’s still right on top of the engine in the boat.
He got denied. Which is why when Tuner taught me to do it I was doing it the hard way.
I’d get the engine to the rpm I wanted, load it down, run over and grab the distributor and turn it while watching the numbers.
Then I’d grab the timing light and see what the timing was, write it down and move on to the next rpm/load.
Let me tell you the distributor gets pretty hot. Trying to do all that while getting burned by that hot distributor was a giant PITA.
So Tuner said get a big hose clamp and to make a handle and turn it with that. That stopped my hands from getting smoked but it was still a nightmare to do.
So I pulled out an old Mallory 3 step box I had, shipped it down to Nevada for the Dave Telling to look at. He updated it and sent it back to me.
So now, I sit at the desk and move the timing with a knob and watch the vacuum and power numbers.
That’s how you end up with MBT at all rpm you test for.
Now I forgot what the topic was. Ok. That’s how I test for MBT. It takes a butt load of time. Not only funding the curve, but getting the curve on the distributor to match what the engine wants.
My point about the part in the SF book had zero to do with fuel. That’s how SF wrote it up, but it is the same for timing changes and such as well. It takes a number of cycles to see a change. They say 100 cycles (and I read that as 100 sparks per cylinder) just to start to affect timing. Or fuel. My mentors both say it’s 250-300 cycles.
So even IF you are pulling at 600 rpm/sec you’d only see a small change if any in that short time.
So now you know how I do it. Depending on the engine, I pick the lowest rpm the engine SHOULD see WOT and I start at that rpm or maybe a bit lower.
It’s nearly impossible to find MBT doing sweep tests. You can say you can do it, but I’m saying you aren’t at MBT.
I didn’t dismiss your dyno sheets. I could barely read them. That’s not your problem but looking at data or graphs on a screen is hard for me. If I’m looking directly at the screen I don’t mind it. If I’m looking at your graph from your screen through my screen it makes it hard to read.
When I get down to the nut cutting I start printing the graphs and reports. I can take notes on them and things like that.
So I saw them. They were a bit hard to read but I got it. I just disagree that your curve is showing MBT.
I should have mentioned I used a locked out distributor to do steady state testing. If you don’t you are fighting the curve in it to try and develop a curve.