mysleeper6
Member
- :
- 2006 Mazdaspeed6
Several people have touched upon this, (and justa4banger is the voice of experience) but what really has to be considered with dyno testing is improvement. Since every dyno posts different numbers, their only use (outside of ego-stoking) comes with using the same dyno to establish a baseline and then getting data from each modification (someone said it best: it's a tuning tool). And everyone seems concerned only about changes in peak horsepower: you should be looking at the entire area under the curve as a measure of improvement.
You also have to consider that no dyno directly measures horsepower. What is being measured is torque, or twisting power. Horsepower is then calculated from the torque measurement by the formula hp=(torque x rpm)/5252. I saw the original poster was concerned about the relationship of the torque and horsepower curves. A couple of observations. The dyno you were using may have been using a different scale on one or both axes, which could have accentuated the differences between the curves. However, by the formula, your curves (and every other dyno sheet's curves) should have interesected at 5252 rpm.
You also have to consider that no dyno directly measures horsepower. What is being measured is torque, or twisting power. Horsepower is then calculated from the torque measurement by the formula hp=(torque x rpm)/5252. I saw the original poster was concerned about the relationship of the torque and horsepower curves. A couple of observations. The dyno you were using may have been using a different scale on one or both axes, which could have accentuated the differences between the curves. However, by the formula, your curves (and every other dyno sheet's curves) should have interesected at 5252 rpm.
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