Axianator
I am a banana!
Ah, my good man, but the weight of a flywheel does have an effect on the rev limiter! As an example, I know of at least one local SHO owner who installed an 8lb. Fidanza flywheel on his '91 and, under the factory programming, his indicated rev limit was increased to at least 7800 rpms in first gear, possibly others. I've also heard of other SHO folk performing similar "upgrades" to their MTX's with similar results.AutoSHO:
No, on both counts. The flywheel absolutely, positively, 100% has nothing to do with the rev limiter programmed into the engine computer.
Smaller tires will make the speedo faster than the car is actually going, but it does not change the speed indicated at a given RPM. At 7300 RPM in third you are doing 106 mph.
I very sincerely doubt there is any SHO out there without a rev limiter that is completely stock. A chipped car can have no rev limit (bad, bad idea) but other than that, your car will be limited to 7300 rpms.
To back this statement, keep in mind that the primary method that the EEC uses to determine when the rev limiter should be activated is PIP. PIP is a sample rate frequency primarily used in timing calculations that lets the EEC know how fast the crank is turning per operating cycle ... if PIP is sampled less than x amount of times in a certain time frame (specified by the "Minimum PIP period" scalar in the EEC program), then the EEC limits RPM by introducing the rev limiter. By using a lightened flywheel such as the Fidanza, you can effectively raise the rev limiter a few hundred RPM's under the stock programming due to the lighter rotational mass allowing the engine to approach redline faster in certain gears. A majority of the time, the EEC won't begin to limit RPM until the engine has already exceeded the stock rev limiter point.
Clear as mud now? wink
As for "indicated speed", I'm assuming you are referring to the speed as indicated by the speedometer? If so, then yes ... by changing to a tire with a ratio other than stock, you can and will throw the speedometer readings off. How much the readings are thrown off will depend on the size and ratio of the tire that you upgraded to. Regardless, your indicated speed will be different than the speed that you are actually travelling.
<small>[ March 16, 2004, 12:37 AM: Message edited by: Axianator ]</small>