Wow! I guess I missed a lot today. Slow morning at the shop, Donny? You missed the point of my post. Much like your SIM, I can juggle the numbers however I want. I could say your making 857 rwhp and the engine is making 30% more 857 X 1.3=1114hp OR I could say that the calculator is actually off 5% the other way rather than only running the variables only in one direction. I just wanted to make sure 5+bhp/cid is your bottom line

I seem to recall that number gradually decreasing. I did have a couple questions before I step out:
Are you expecting over 1200 rwhp with new combination?
Are you changing the convertor or are you hoping the extra rpm's will help it couple better with the extra 400hp it will be seeing?
Why are you willing to take the new combination to the dyno when you were so against taking the old one, especially as hard as we tried to convince you of the benefits of going?
There's a problem with the equation you're using.
857 x 1.3 = 1114 Not correct.
857 / .7 = 1224 Correct.
Two very different results. My equation is adding back in drivetrain losses. The other equation is only adding back in 30% of the 857. That's not the correct answer for what we are trying to examine, which is drivetrain losses.
If you're going to show incorrect equations, you should at least explain to others why it's incorrect to prevent confusion, or the spreading of incorrect equations for coming up with drivetrain losses.
Question 1: That's a little high.
Question 2: I'm going to start off using the same TC. I think it's going to be real close to what the new engine will need. I do expect it to couple much better with the extra rpm. Slippage may still be the same, though.
Question 3: You didn't need to convince me of the benefits. I realize it will speed tuning along. I just wanted to see what I could do without a dyno. I did grow up in a time where dynos were not very common and I managed to tune my high school racer to an impressive performance level without a dyno.
I guess I just wanted to prove to myself that it could still be done with all the electronics. I proved it can be done very effectively, but it was more difficult than it would have been if I had used a dyno. It required me to think up some very interesting ways of loading the engine.
Besides, I experimented with countless fuel curves, since I was learning how to pattern just a basic, well working fuel map. If I had to pay for all the dyno time that my car would have been sitting on the dyno while I re-patterned the fuel map to try a different tack, I would have spent a small fortune. Figuring out a way to tune the car without having to use a dyno did pay off not just from the money I saved on dyno time, it allowed me to really take my time with my experimenting with the fuel map, not feel rushed, and really learn what didn't work and what worked better.
My experience tuning my car without a dyno came in very handy when I lately had to tune a car on a caribbean island where there was no dyno to be found on the island. About three runs down the track and the tune was at a point where I could give the owner instructions over the phone as they moved the boost up higher, after they removed the intake and sent it to me so that I could fix the aux fueling system for them.
There was another tuning job I did where the owner of the car insisted that the car not be put on a dyno. That was another situation where the time that I spent tuning my car without a dyno paid off.
The reason for putting this new build on the dyno, is just because I'm real curious to see what the numbers will be with this build. Especially after getting the surprise I did with the last engine. When I pulled off that 8.7 with the Stage I, you have to realize that not only was the fuel ratio leaning, but even more surprising is that I had a few cylinders that had been leaking down a lot. One cylinder was leaking down about 60% for a year before that run. At that point, when I finally realized that I had something pretty unique, why torture the engine on a dyno just to get a number when you know you have multiple cylinders with big leakdown numbers? It just didn't make any sense to me. I would end up with a dyno number that would have not been a true representation of what the engine was really capable of putting out had the engine been in better working order, and the tuning was basically done.