delcowizzid
newzealand turbo 3.8
- Joined
- Mar 3, 2010
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- 503
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SignUp Now!I was running c16 ($18 a gallon), and anything over 24 psi I was getting kr. I also was only running 18* timing. I installed an alky kit, and that helped, but e85 has been amazing! At 26 psi boost I was getting no kr. At 27 early in 3rd gear I was getting .9 kr for a split second, and I clicked the alky on 2, and now have no kr. Stock block, and 11.2 @ 117.6 in the 1/4. Before e85 11.5 @ 118 was my best. Faster pass was with a much smaller turbo. Stock, drilled out lines with a double pumperYes it is near me and I mix it with 93 which allows me to run 17psi which nets me a mid 11 sec pass....however it will in no way get me to my goal. I would have to run straight E-85 and I still dont know if that would cut it...plus I dont have enough injector to run straight E-85
This is all by feel based on tuning several cars over the years, but with that combo and a low 18-20 degree timing street chip I would expect you could run about 19-20 psi in 3rd gear on straight 93 octane. Keep the timing low and add boost up to about 25 psi and you will need in the ballpark of 100 octane, maybe a little more, maybe not so much, so since 100 and 104 unleaded is pretty common one of those would be a good place to start. If you go to 25 psi and add more timing like 23-24 degrees you might need all the way up to 110 octane and that's hard to do without lead. You will definitely pick up more hp from the boost than from the higher timing, and the lower the timing the easier and safer it is to tune becase the engine is less detonation prone if you get the fueling too far off. Good luck.
Your compression ratio is static regardless of boost. Cylinder pressure will vary with boost and power but the compression ratio stays the same. You're builder will know but probably between 8:1 and 9:1.
When the air is cool all I can get is roughly 18psi on 93 I have seen 19 psi on small spikes but that usually will result in 1-2 degrees of kr.....so I back down the boost to 17psi and I bump the timing up a few degrees to help spool time (a few gallons of E-85 helps with this). As I said this results in a mid 11 sec pass which is pretty fun on street....my drag radials are useless so more power would actually hurt me in the traction department.
Math isn't all it takes to run the number...