Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
I'm really happy with how it is running now, but I am choosing to keep my boost a secret. Nick, if you want to know pm me.
:laugh_ti: You guys are funny.
No, although Josh T. of SHO NUT fame has managed to achieve the same result in his blower car by hitting excessively rich AFRs for extended periods of time. The last time I assisted Tony in tuning El Toro, we successfully massaged his calibration to achieve WOT AFRs of around 12.5:1. Unfortunately, we have not yet had time to work out the bugs in his idle and part throttle programming.Wasn't that Texan Toney that broke a piston from running WAY to rich while he was in the staging lanes at a drag strip?
I have to agree with Jason on this one. I would trust Tim's tuning abilities but none of that is going to matter when the explosions in that chamber reach a certain power level. IMO it's only a matter of time before those pathetic pistons give up...
10:1 is very rich... Too rich. As long as your intake air charge is cool, you'll be perfectly fine. Running too much fuel isn't as desired as you think. I've heard reports on someone here breaking a piston from too much fuel...
11's is OK... but I wouldn't aim for it. 12:1 is the lowest I would go. If you're breaking stuff at that point, you should have paid more attention to timing and heat.
The last time I assisted Tony in tuning El Toro, we successfully massaged his calibration to achieve WOT AFRs of around 12.5:1. Unfortunately, we have not yet had time to work out the bugs in his idle and part throttle programming.
FWIW, I agree with Jason on this. Although it's not a highly publicized fact, running an excessively rich fuel mixture can be just as damaging to an engine as running that same engine with an overtly lean fuel mixture. Unless you have a unique configuration that would dictate otherwise, I would not recommend commanding AFRs richer than 12:1 on a V6 SHO engine, regardless of operating mode.
Dooood!!! Now he has to change his boost level LOL.
J/K.![]()

I'm glad to hear you're getting a lot more done with this project. Still a long way from finished though.![]()


Don't go blowing this engine on purpose now...![]()
Talk to Scott, he's done it a few times. Has the melted pistons to prove it.Trust me my friend, I'm not planning on it.........
yet...
But once I get the money for the forged build, I am curious to see what the blowing point is on the sho engine.
~Johnathon~
Talk to Scott, he's done it a few times. Has the melted pistons to prove it.
Who is this Scott? Does he have the remote turbo? If he melted them he leaned out then.
I mean I'm thinking as long as you avoid leaning it out and detonation, you should be fine. But the second it detonates under high boost, I'm thinking its done....
Well, he certainly melted some pistons, but he was a long way from the blowing point of the engine.
I'd say 17 - 18 PSI used very ******* stock pistons is a "blowing point" of the motor. Since the motor DID blow, would you say it was the "blowing point" of the steering wheel then?![]()