Who wants to know the Dyno results!? Yeah, me too...
Yesterday the engine was running fine, and I've driven about 150km since the install, but the power band was way too late to be useful so today we extended the length of the intake to pull the powerband back into a useful range for a street user like myself (for a racing guy you would be ready to roll methinks). It starts pulling superhard at about 5500rpm, which is totally useless on the road, because you change gear a second later and you're back out of the power band... Anyway, my point was the engine was running fine, but not ideal so we popped off the airbox and extended the intake by 60mm for the dyno run and reassembled it, and the car just wasn't running at all so we missed the dyno run today.
Considering there are no electrical components in the trumpets and airbox that we made, we suspect that there was an extremely unfortunate coincidence that the Crank sensor died at the exact same time for absolutely no reason related to what we were doing. *sigh* Hopefully that is all it is so we can replace the part and get it back on the dyno tomorrow.
We're pretty sure that is the case, but if anyone has experienced the following before please share!
- All other functions as normal (engine cranks over, fuel pump injectors etc)
- Engine will not fire
- During cranking the fuel pump, injectors and coils aren't working (this seems consistent with the crank not 'seeing' the engine rotating - we tested the components all individually)
- Our scanner saw zero rpm during cranking
- Resistance between pins 1-2 and 3-2 on the CPS ~600 Ohms, while I'm lead to believe it should be 1k (If someone knows the answer to this it would be extremely helpful)
- No engine error codes
The engine is acting as if it has been immobilised, and though we're pretty sure it is the CPS (already have a replacement on the way) it would still be good to know if someone has had a similar experience.
EDIT: If anyone wants to know for future reference, the above are the symptoms of a failed Crank SensorSo yeah, I'm still not sure of the results yet. I can say for certain that it was down on power for a while, but I'm really quite impressed how the stock ECU learned the new setup - I reckon that there was
at least a 10% improvement in power from when we completed the install to when I got home. The problem though, is that the power is coming on at 5500RPM which is just too late to be useful - the stock setup exists purely to generate torque as early as possible, which is does extremely effectively at the cost of choking out the top end as you can all see in the early dyno results. However, 5500RPM is too late as when you shift you're back around 4500RPM so you're out of the powerband. We've done out best to extend the intake into every available space in the engine bay to see if it will have street applications at all. When it comes on though its a real kick, you can tell there is more power (and its still pulling till the redline, definitely room for many more RPM). The other thing is the power delivery is very linear, not the hard rise of the DISA and then flat from the mid-onwards. I think that if we can get enough length to get the power on from that 4000~4500RPM point then we can make more power than we lose, and make the kit viable for street use, otherwise it will probably be a racing only setup for strokers and cams. I did learn from this that absolutely, other setups with large ITBs and short runners are the wrong way to go - and I haven't even gotten it on the dyno - for any M42/4 setup, and if it is a street setup you would absolutely be losing power. I have a whole bunch of theoretical stuff I wrote in Jan for this thread, but I've been holding off it till the dyno results so that I could support my points though everything I've experienced since then has confirmed my findings. Hopefully we will get some results tomorrow...
Some pics of the short setup, we added another set of 50mm spaces + a 10mm spacer, and if we can get it running tomorrow, we will try another 15mm of trumpet length inside the box!

