2010 - Which Gear to Do Dyno Run In?

Old Sep 18, 2010 | 12:32 AM
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2010 - Which Gear to Do Dyno Run In?

I am throwing in the towel on the crappy tranny shifting on my 2010 FX4 and I have ordered an SCT XCal3 with custom tunes from VMP. I was thinking about doing a before and after dyno run at a local shop, just out of curiosity.

I have done some dyno tuning on my Triumph Rocket III motorcycle, and always do the runs in 4th gear because is it closest to a 1:1 final drive ratio. It looks like that 4th may be the closest on the F150, but with the 09/10's, the automatic trans you can select 1, 2, and 3 and D. Any suggestions? Anyone know what PHP did when they did their runs with a 2009? Can the SCT allow the user to hold a gear?
 

Last edited by Pig9r; Sep 18, 2010 at 12:34 AM.
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 07:52 AM
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your dyno shop will know what to do if they don't then go some place else.
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 07:59 AM
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Not easy info to find, but I did find this:



Note they used 3rd gear - I'm thinking that's right as it's the highest gear that can be held by the gear selector.

No - the tuner isn't the way to do this (hold a gear).

MGD
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 08:16 PM
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1:1 ratio is the ticket, so 3rd with the OD off.
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 08:20 PM
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Originally Posted by ONELOWF
1:1 ratio is the ticket, so 3rd with the OD off.
No 1:1 in that 6-speed .... nor OD 'off' functionality ....
4th and 5th bracket 1:1, but 3rd is the highest ratio that can be held.

MGD
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 08:33 PM
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I'm interested in hearing why "a tuner isn't the right way to hold a gear".. Maybe it's just me, but in my Lightning I had a dyno program that had all the same engine parameters but had different trans parameters so that I could dyno as low as 2500 without it jumping to 2nd, this was all through an EEC-Tuner.
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 08:38 PM
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i was told by a guy who owned a performance shop in florida that you dont need the 1:1 ratio to figure out the HP. and anyone wondering, because i was, a 95-97 trans am LT1 he said averaged 312hp at the crank without the ram air. just a stock LT1 trans am which was rated at 285hp. it was well known that the LT1 and LS1 in the f-bodies were under-rated so it looks like the number is 312 and i dont know about the 93 and 94 which were rated 275, but i would guess 302-312
 
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 08:54 PM
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Originally Posted by Lstruck
I'm interested in hearing why "a tuner isn't the right way to hold a gear".. Maybe it's just me, but in my Lightning I had a dyno program that had all the same engine parameters but had different trans parameters so that I could dyno as low as 2500 without it jumping to 2nd, this was all through an EEC-Tuner.
This is a separate TCM - this level of complexity is going to require a bit more work on the part of the tuner to accomplish - for little reason, since 3rd appears to cover a wide rpm range.

See the plot above - it's got a spread from below 2500 rpm already.

Never said it was not possible - just that it isn't done, or required, normally - even on a 4-speed - most just use 3rd, OD off. Or held in second, if required. Seems to be the preferred method, for a reason. No apparent issues with it inadvertantly dropping down a gear.

Lots of plots here show this: http://www.vmptuning.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=34

But yer right - I should have said 'not the preferred' way instead of 'not the right way' - thanks.

MGD
 

Last edited by MGDfan; Sep 18, 2010 at 09:04 PM.
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 10:34 PM
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2nd is often used on trucks because the tuner doesn't want high rotational speeds at the tires and drive shafts. Not sure what the 3rd ratio is on the 6 speed, but I couldn't see them going above 3rd for the same reason. Of course, if its something built for those sorts of speeds they may very well choose a higher gear (helps with dyno "shock" so they can often get a power reading at a lower RPM). The tuner is usually going to factor in several things, like the vehicle, tire size, final gear ratio, etc.
 

Last edited by DigitalMarket; Sep 18, 2010 at 10:43 PM.
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Old Sep 18, 2010 | 11:27 PM
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Thanks for the responses and good find MGDFan.

3rd gear is 1.52 to 1, 4th is 1.14 to 1 and 5th is an overdrive at .86 to 1 (6th is .69 to 1 in case you were wondering). These specs are directly from Ford and I believe don't figure axle ratios and wheel/tire size.

I'll have to ask the dyno operator if there is a correction factor for gearing, but really I guess it doesn't matter too much, I am not really concerned about the final numbers, just more curious about how much of a gain there will be.
 
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Old Sep 19, 2010 | 01:49 PM
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3rd gear, a good dyno operator can adjust the setting so it's close to a 4th-5th gear ratio's
 
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Old Sep 19, 2010 | 10:28 PM
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yeah i was talking to that guy who said he owned the place in florida. i was telling him about my truck being 1:1 at 4th gear but that i cant do that stock because my truck is speed limited at 100mph which is 4k in 4th. thats when he said you dont need 1:1 which i understand its easier to figure out but there has to be a way to figure it out if you know what the gear ratio is for the gear you use. plus wouldnt a 3.55 rear end show different than a 3.08? the transmission gear is 1:1 but the wheels are not 1:1. or does what im thinking of only effect the torque reading?
 
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Old Sep 20, 2010 | 06:07 AM
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Dynos don't actually measure hp.

They measure torque. HP is calculated from torque.

hp = T*RPM/5252
 
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