![Image](http://i427.photobucket.com/albums/pp357/MitsosVR6/th_DSC02703.jpg)
I am also going to have a test since i have fitted a simota air filter (on the passenger side) and a new exhaust manifold 4-2-1 pipes to see how much power i have got.
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The lower intake air temperature you have the most horsepower you get.alex.tas wrote:which would give you higher power due to the air being cooler and more dense?
No. The temperature did not make any difference to the output of the run.MightyMouse wrote:If ambient temperature is making any difference to the dyno runs then something is VERY WRONG. Any reputable dyno operator wil be using a correction system to iron out these differences in output caused by ambient shifts between dyno runs. Being Europe i'd suggest DIN70020
What you see in the diagram is two lines. Each of the two lines is the average of two runs (with + without snorkel). Between these 4 runs we did not turn off the engine nor removed the car from the roller for the exact reason you are refering to.If the vehicle is being removed from the dyno between comparisons then errors creep in. Even how hard the vehicle is tied down to the rollers will significantly change the losses - especially with off road tyres.
When I had installed the snorkel the only thing I said is that "I don't think the car has changed to worse maybe a slight change in high range but still might be my idea because the car's sound changed.Also..... the smallest power increment that can be detected ( felt when driving ) by a trained "test" driver is considered to be 7%.
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