Since Keith has never run 100% meth, and the cited 11.7 pass is slower than his 11.1 best, the data does not demonstrate meth optimization. At most, it shows a car running a different setup with worse results — which raises questions, not conclusions.
Even setting the times aside, the explanation is still unaccounted for. Isolated log screenshots, selectively cropped and narrated after the fact, are not a substitute for a clearly defined tuning method. Without full-context data (configuration, fuel strategy, meth percentage, commanded vs delivered fuel, timing targets, and repeatability), those snapshots are not verifiable and therefore not trustworthy as proof.
Keith himself attributed the 11.7 pass to a boost leak when he shared it publicly. A run affected by a known mechanical fault cannot be used as validation of tuning strategy, fuel choice, or methanol methodology. Once a confounding variable like a boost leak is acknowledged, the data is disqualified from comparative analysis.
A run explained by a boost leak answers only one question: why it was slower — not how a tuning method works.
Please share the actual datalog file for independent review. Screenshots and narrated interpretations aren’t sufficient to evaluate configuration, context, or causality. The raw log is the only meaningful data.