While you babies sit around whining about me not feeding you the confirmation bias you apparently need for your stupid spending decisions, everyone seems to be overlooking my actual point, which I feel like I've made 100 times before. THE TURBINES ARE THE BOTTLENECK. You're all talking about trying to build 20 lane freeways, but completely ignoring that it all eventually merges into a single lane residential construction zone in front of an elementary school.
Here you go, guys. Five logs at varying boost ran out to 6800 RPM, converted to virtual dyno. All done the same night, on the same road, in the same direction, with the same 8 mile freeway cooldown lap in between. The lower chart is ECU predicted exhaust manifold pressure. Everyone wants to pretend I'm an idiot, so go ahead- look what happens to the power band as you load up the turbos and draw your own ******* conclusions.
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Next, let's compare some logs at fixed Load targets using various cam advance angles. NA versions of the engine advance the intake cam as much as 60 degrees, but look what happens when you add any overlap with all that exhaust backpressure. Again, I'm not eXpErT enough to understand what it means, so see if you can figure it out. Extra credit: The gap between the vertical white lines and the end of the charts has significance too. See if you can figure it out.
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Okay,
@802SHO, there's my actual data proving my point. But again, I'm just a dumb simp, ya know. Maybe you can ask your wife's boyfriend to take a break from selling you pipe dreams and come enlighten us all on the benefit of porting heads that 1) aren't a bottleneck and 2) already bench flow enough to support 50% more power than the 3.5L actually makes.
Your turn, Andrew. Share with us all that hard data proving the benefit of head work for this platform and stop repeating your delusional belief that porting always adds power.