My Hypertech Impressions

^^^ Im still new to this, but, performance parts wise, being almost fully bolted on, would anyone recommend this Hypertech Sport Power Programmer...? How is it in comparison to the COBB AP...? Any info welcome...
 
^^^ My mods as of right now is Injen CAI, COBB TIP, SU RMM, Denso ITV22's, Forge MBC (@17psi), 3" Turboback (Catless dp/tp, HKS CBE)... HPFP and FMIC/TMIC and tuning tool next...
 
there is alot of discussion about this subject here, but if your looking plainly for a plug and play REFLASH, not one you can tune yourself then this is for you, if you want to add more and more goodies then I say go COBB..this is plainly for someone who wants the most out of their car with ONLY very minor bolt ons


^^^ My mods as of right now is Injen CAI, COBB TIP, SU RMM, Denso ITV22's, Forge MBC (@17psi), 3" Turboback (Catless dp/tp, HKS CBE)... HPFP and FMIC/TMIC and tuning tool next...
 
The is NO low fuel pressure. You're reading the datalog wrong. Trust me, when my stock pump crapped out and dropped to 700 psi over 5000, I noticed it and you would, too, Dashhawk or no.

MBOIZ, why don't you read the threads on this? I'm more modified than you and the HT tune is really pretty good.
 
there is alot of discussion about this subject here, but if your looking plainly for a plug and play REFLASH, not one you can tune yourself then this is for you, if you want to add more and more goodies then I say go COBB..this is plainly for someone who wants the most out of their car with ONLY very minor bolt ons

I see, thanks for the info spdjnke...
 
The is NO low fuel pressure. You're reading the datalog wrong. Trust me, when my stock pump crapped out and dropped to 700 psi over 5000, I noticed it and you would, too, Dashhawk or no.

MBOIZ, why don't you read the threads on this? I'm more modified than you and the HT tune is really pretty good.

Sorry, after I posted in this thread, I seen another thread that was pretty long and I started reading up on it... Thanks Darth Vader...
 
Funny I read all this untill warm up stuff, Heck I dont even drive my car till it hits operation temp..I always warm her up first.:)
 
If you're measuring what's easier on it, that's harder. Extended idling for "warmup" doesn't heat the cylinders evenly and causes additional wear. A small amount but, real. The best bet is to get through the warmup process as fast as possible, bar racing the engine at high load, obviously.

There's no excuse for bad warmup performance on a modern car. Why we had to "warm up" the car back in the bad old days is because carb performance off warmup was so terrible, with gasoline falling out of suspension and pooling, weak ignition systems failing to ignite erratic mixture ratios, big heavy masses in the rotating assembly taking ages to get hot, crappy ring seal from loose bore tolerances ad garbage ring materials, etc.
 
If you're measuring what's easier on it, that's harder. Extended idling for "warmup" doesn't heat the cylinders evenly and causes additional wear. A small amount but, real. The best bet is to get through the warmup process as fast as possible,bar racing the engine at high load, obviously.

What? I prefer to let the car idle down and then I start driving it without going into boost. You should never rush the warm up!
 
I never leave the parking space until the rpms drop to 1000, and sometime wait till the cat temps are up to 600F, also no boosting till atleast water temp is almost mid way on the meter.
 
For god's sake, read the post. I didn't say you should race out of the driveway. I said you should drive the car to warm it up, not let it idle in the driveway.

Idling in the driveway will warm the water up but, the cylinders aren't heated evenly and this causes wear.

If you look at the insides of engines subjected to protracted warmup, short trips and extended idling, you see hot spots on the cylinder walls and scuffing on walls and piston skirts. I have verified this happens with many different types of engines.

To repeat: Drive the car normally from the point the idle stabilises, that'll be just fine and better for it in the long run.

Everybody here that's responded seems to be doing something similar to this so, apparently it's just reading comprehension.
 
I thought drivng the car cold( Not op TEMP) cause over oiling issue. The car when cold,The oil pressure and fuel pressure are high then when the car is at operation temp? NO. I have always had( Not the SPD3) an oil pressure gauges and would notice the fuel pressure is higher then at idle when warm.
 
Dude lose the attitude, its not necessary..further more when you say something don't use your popular mechanics lingo and exspect everyone to know exactly what your saying...not trying to argue but when you start making insulting remarks its not cool at all even if it is your post!
 
It gets frustrating when people come at you for things you don't write or misinterpret what you do. It's not "attitude". I don't think it's an unreasonable expectation that people read carefully before they post.

Asking clarifying questions without the exclamatory presentation like this, for example:

"What? I prefer to let the car idle down and then I start driving it without going into boost. You should never rush the warm up!"

...is totally fine, in my opinion.

I apologise if my views seem harsh to you. I prefer to help if I can.
 

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