My point is that the Dyno is not the end all. Results on the actual pavement trump the Dyno. Dyno is a great starting point, and with a race Car, most of which are manual the Dyno is a good measure of how it will do vs another car, driver and shifting being the same.
Just for clarification, I have spent A LOT of time both on a Track and working on legit race cars. Mostly SCCA, and NASA, but NASCAR too. Spotted for several seasons of late model, and did suspension setup. I have been around. Not clueless. Heck, my 69 year old dad is still throwing a car around a Track at Summit Point and VIR. I am fairly new to this going only straight...
This Dyno is it, or 1/4 is it does not give you the whole package. Most of these owners will not take it to a 1/4 Track or pay for a dyno. They just want to beat the unsuspecting BMW off the line, or embarrass some FIAT’s.
Dyno’s do not give the whole picture on these ST’s. Shifting is IMPORTANT! When we were working on the E50 and 93 Tunes for these, we gained many 10ths in just working on shifting. Adam@ZFG sent a revision with changes, me and a few others went out and ran them, gave logs, impressions, and times. We learned what worked and what didn’t. This is why logging and not just Dyno tuning is important. Power is great, but if you can’t put it down it is pointless.
This is why Adam@ZFG’s approach is SO important. Baseline tunes, logging to see how your car responds, and adjusting from there. Not just one and done. The proof is in the results. For me it is 0-60 right now, because my local Track is closed(COVID).
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