Blademaster
21 March 2007, 10:33
Just had my car mapped for next years Midland Hill Climb Championship.
Not running anything special, but thought it useful info for all how it was done. Spec is an Sti V2 RA all standard except Apexi FC, FMIC, Zero sports Induction filter and exhaust.
Car came from Api and it was mapped it on the road for UK fuel (thanks David for a great support as usual). Car ran very well. I fitted a front mount and played around with the intake position. Ran it on Shell jungle juice, I had a flat spot around 4k rpm.
Don’t like dyno rollers as my cozzy used to skip at 400+hp so I started to use PJ Motorsport in Wednesfield WV11 3PX. He always got some good results for me. I talked to Paul who owns the joint about my V2 Sti, he seems to do more and more jap stuff these days. So booked it in.
Paul :thumb: uses a dyno pack that bolts directly onto the car wheel hubs, so no chance of wheel spin or slippage. Car did 330bhp on first run and showed up over fuelling at 3 to 4k rpm. (boost wasn’t stable either at first).
Paul spent 3 hours modifying the map on my FC commander hand control until fuelling and ignition settings matched the 20psi boost curve. He never changed the boost at any point and managed a health torque curve and upped the power to 375 BHP at the flywheel. The torque figure wasn’t that much better than from the start, but now car pulls well through whole rev range especially once it hits 4250 rpm.
By mapping on a dyno and then road testing my car has been transformed. Paul has new laptop software en route to speed the job up in the future. He’s a no bull**** type of guy and doesnt charge like a wounded rhino for the work.
The data he gives you is great, including testing the DCCD operation and shows clear boost, torque, BHP, Lambda and individual wheel speed/torque data to take with you.
Next off I need to get a boost controller fitted (should have done that first). Having read 911’s efforts on the DCCD controller, using a dyno pack must be an easy way to map engine to boost controller and DCCD controller in each individual gear. Might be cheaper way to improve the car than throwing £000,0000 at more power and suspension mods!
Lets see how it does at Curb next week.
PS. Never going to try and compete with EVO MAN and a few others on this website. Sprinting tin tops was supposed to be for the average man on the street to run his daily road car on a track at the weekends…now that’s a distant memory ehh? (steps off soap box)….
Not running anything special, but thought it useful info for all how it was done. Spec is an Sti V2 RA all standard except Apexi FC, FMIC, Zero sports Induction filter and exhaust.
Car came from Api and it was mapped it on the road for UK fuel (thanks David for a great support as usual). Car ran very well. I fitted a front mount and played around with the intake position. Ran it on Shell jungle juice, I had a flat spot around 4k rpm.
Don’t like dyno rollers as my cozzy used to skip at 400+hp so I started to use PJ Motorsport in Wednesfield WV11 3PX. He always got some good results for me. I talked to Paul who owns the joint about my V2 Sti, he seems to do more and more jap stuff these days. So booked it in.
Paul :thumb: uses a dyno pack that bolts directly onto the car wheel hubs, so no chance of wheel spin or slippage. Car did 330bhp on first run and showed up over fuelling at 3 to 4k rpm. (boost wasn’t stable either at first).
Paul spent 3 hours modifying the map on my FC commander hand control until fuelling and ignition settings matched the 20psi boost curve. He never changed the boost at any point and managed a health torque curve and upped the power to 375 BHP at the flywheel. The torque figure wasn’t that much better than from the start, but now car pulls well through whole rev range especially once it hits 4250 rpm.
By mapping on a dyno and then road testing my car has been transformed. Paul has new laptop software en route to speed the job up in the future. He’s a no bull**** type of guy and doesnt charge like a wounded rhino for the work.
The data he gives you is great, including testing the DCCD operation and shows clear boost, torque, BHP, Lambda and individual wheel speed/torque data to take with you.
Next off I need to get a boost controller fitted (should have done that first). Having read 911’s efforts on the DCCD controller, using a dyno pack must be an easy way to map engine to boost controller and DCCD controller in each individual gear. Might be cheaper way to improve the car than throwing £000,0000 at more power and suspension mods!
Lets see how it does at Curb next week.
PS. Never going to try and compete with EVO MAN and a few others on this website. Sprinting tin tops was supposed to be for the average man on the street to run his daily road car on a track at the weekends…now that’s a distant memory ehh? (steps off soap box)….