u never explain where and how u dyno your car.. I did dyno with bonnet up, some put dyno with fans in front which does make some different.
but for the fact, CAI is LAG at the low end
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u never explain where and how u dyno your car.. I did dyno with bonnet up, some put dyno with fans in front which does make some different.
but for the fact, CAI is LAG at the low end
Low Down = <3000RPM so we both stand corrected except ginganggooly may have intepreted the what I think is low RPM wrongly...
Everything is cleared up now although there is an obvious flat spot... :)
che?? wtf does the bonnet have to do with this situation?
EuroAccord13 hit the nail on the head... it comes down to how you define low end. I'd class anything below 4k as low end, in which case, the CAI -at WOT- is clearly much better than stock, as indicated on the displayed graph. Below 3000 it's much of a muchness, as there is a crossover.
Case closed :thumbsup:
Nail on your head or mine? LOL.... :D :D
Euro have around 8000RPM to play with (7400 for you anal measuring kids :D)
So to 3K is low end, 3K to 5K is mid range... 5K up is high end.. Although we cannot really classify our cars to have high end RPM because we don't! Anyway.. ALL CLEARED UP!!!!
I'm used to a 9200rpm ceiling :P
It's part of the whole reason many argue that dynos cannot represent real world driving situations, and hence measuring power/torque changes from air intakes is difficult.
With the bonnet down, you don't get the airflow (to the filter as well as through the engine bay) that you when driving the car. The in-drawn air also gets heated more which affects engine performance.
Hence, many leave the bonnet up and blow fans -- but that also adds extra cool air and doesn't allow for the under-bonnet heat that happens when you drive on the road.
Some argue that only real way to check things is to plug in the computer and plot things while you drive...
"Dyno-proven" doesn't necessarily mean much in real world driving -- unless your only real concern is winning dyno shoot-outs.
EDIT: Plus, anyone thinking about a Comptech icebox had better move quickly as Comptech is shutting its doors according to the US forums...
so which is better out of the three again? lol....
i will go injen or K&N
more famous
Just thought I'll mention that Torque is in fact a derivative of Power, so the power curve's gradient at any one point, when plotted, will become the torque curve. So you can mentally picture how the torque distribution and performance of the car from the power curve. :D
To me anyway, reading a power curve and torque curve has little difference, you can tell instinctively what effects any change in both will have on drive ability, I think!