IF I combine that with my pinstripes, I should be really fast.General rule of thumb is 5HP per sticker.
IF I combine that with my pinstripes, I should be really fast.General rule of thumb is 5HP per sticker.
IF I combine that with my pinstripes, I should be really fast.
LOL! vtec (snarkle)Hey, what would happen if you... made the stripe, OUT OF STICKERS!!! Would that be like VTEC power?
This is my new favorite thread.
The ones that do work just modify power curves and such which means you will wind up losing drivability or performance somewhere else.
Do tellas the owner of a car with a properly set up chipped PCM, that's absolutely false.
as the owner of a car with a properly set up chipped PCM, that's absolutely false.
does the LS pcm have a chip port?
Nope.
The ones that do work just modify power curves and such which means you will wind up losing drivability or performance somewhere else.
as the owner of a car with a properly set up chipped PCM, that's absolutely false.
Hey Chris, I wasn't actually referring to a chip for the LS as I have never heard of one. I only know of ones that work for other vehicles of the type mentioned in the rest of my post you didn't quote. Please, tell us what you know of a chip that works with the LS and if its setup more for drag racing, road racing, or whatever.
The key words there was "properly set up". A generic chip or program is not properly set up. Properly set up means the car is dyno tuned, then the chip or program is tuned to that specific car.
A truly proper computer tune will run max economy, max performance or max towing without the need to switch profiles manually. The computer is already measuring throttle position, engine load and RPM so can tell if you're cruising, racing or towing. If the computer is correct, the only profile switch you need is the throttle. Transmission tuning is just as important as engine tuning too, just tuning my transmission on my truck made it a hell of a lot faster because I was able to tune the shift points at all throttle points for best performance under heavy throttle, and smooth imperceptible shifting when cruising. If my LS shifted half as smooth when cruising as my truck it would shift like a Lincoln should. Having your own tuning software where you can make unlimited changes IMO is the only way to tune correctly.
The key words there was "properly set up". A generic chip or program is not properly set up. Properly set up means the car is dyno tuned, then the chip or program is tuned to that specific car.
A truly proper computer tune will run max economy, max performance or max towing without the need to switch profiles manually. The computer is already measuring throttle position, engine load and RPM so can tell if you're cruising, racing or towing. If the computer is correct, the only profile switch you need is the throttle. Transmission tuning is just as important as engine tuning too, just tuning my transmission on my truck made it a hell of a lot faster because I was able to tune the shift points at all throttle points for best performance under heavy throttle, and smooth imperceptible shifting when cruising. If my LS shifted half as smooth when cruising as my truck it would shift like a Lincoln should. Having your own tuning software where you can make unlimited changes IMO is the only way to tune correctly.
Robot's point is still true.
These things are always a compromise. The factors that somewhat oppose each other are: Power, emissions, economy, drive-ability, and engine life. The automakers have a lot of resources that they expend on getting the best compromise that suits them. They have to meet certain maximum emissions allowances. They have to meet certain fleet wide economy standards (fractions on an MPG count). After that, they need good engine life and good drive-ability. Lastly, they get as much power out as they can.
People who go out and "tune" these after the fact change the compromise. They don't just make anything a little better without making something else a little worse. You may not notice the 0.2 mpg worse mileage, or maybe you don't notice that the emissions went up 1 and a half times. Maybe the drive-ability is good in your environment, but it might not be so good if you move to somewhere else. As for engine life, you'll probably never know for sure if that was shortened some. If your tune gives you more power, then you got worse on one or more of the other four things, maybe not enough that you can notice, but it did happen. Otherwise, the automakers would pay millions for the secret to your new tune.
Not quite, Robot. The programing can make the most of what you have, but it can't overcome hardware limitations. It can maximize the fuel economy your car gets while cruising but if the hardware's maximum possible mileage is 20MPG, 20MPG is all the programming will yield. If the hardware will allow it then yes, you could see 850HP and 40MPG. Chevy is getting 30+MPG out of the Corvette and it's pushing 400+HP because the hardware supports it. A personal program might pull another 5MPG and another 40HP out of the car than the OEM does mainly because the OEM has its own parameters to meet (we've all discussed this before so I won't go into what they might be this time ) and their targets won't necessarily be your targets.
EDIT - guess I kinda mirrored Joe's post.
You're focusing on the wrong thing here. This is a discussion about programming benefits, not whether the Corvette is a different car than the LS. The computer program doesn't know what it's in, all it knows is that it sees these inputs, so it generates those outputs based on its programming parameters. Tweak the parameters in the program and you can improve power, fuel economy or both. With modern programs, you can tweak both performance and fuel economy to their maximum levels depending on what part is tweaked. You could even tweak the program to generate maximum fuel economy under WOT and maximum power for cruising if you wanted to. Of course your mileage would suck in the short time before the engine blows up because you'd be running pig rich at cruise and too lean at WOT and maximum fuel economy at WOT isn't going to be great to begin with...