I'm not offended. And I'm not having a crack at you or other h6 owners in any way.
I'm having a crack at Matt for perpetuating this crap that an unopened n/a h6 can make 200kw atw from headers, e85 and tune
dr20t wrote:I'm not offended. And I'm not having a crack at you or other h6 owners in any way.
I'm having a crack at Matt for perpetuating this crap that an unopened n/a h6 can make 200kw atw from headers, e85 and tune
dr20t wrote:Or another way to look at it is to say the h6 would make 480 flywheel kw's with 14.7psi of boost
Dunno about you, but haven't seen any turbo or supercharged h6 anywhere in the world make this sort of power - including completely forged and blueprinted big dollar machines.
Not hating on the h6 - love the engine as much as the next man (and infact would love a turbo'd ez30 over my 2.0 litre anyday of the week). But lets call a spade a spade and stop with this keyboard bullshit about making 30% more power on an n/a car from a tune.
Housemusic1 wrote:So just to confirm, your dyno numbers are strictly NA H6, not a turbo, correct? I keep seeing people talk about boost, and psi, in relation to H6, but you wouldn't have "boost" on a NA engine. Again, I'm in the US, so I know they have different H6 platforms in Australia, but non of them are factory turbo, correct?
Housemusic1 wrote:Ok, so another stupid question here.... Let's say you do tune for E85, new fuel pump, headers, etc... Would there be an issue if you are not able to put E85 in? Say, if you are on a road trip, and can't find a service station with E85, would you mess anything up by putting in a tank of premium gas? Again, based on the knowledge from this forum, my questions probably sounds stupid, but I'm very interested in the potential gains (even if it's just increase torque for the 2-5K RPM range) that can be had. Again, thanks for the help. Stop arguing, enjoy your Subaru!
Swipez wrote:Housemusic1 wrote:Ok, so another stupid question here.... Let's say you do tune for E85, new fuel pump, headers, etc... Would there be an issue if you are not able to put E85 in? Say, if you are on a road trip, and can't find a service station with E85, would you mess anything up by putting in a tank of premium gas? Again, based on the knowledge from this forum, my questions probably sounds stupid, but I'm very interested in the potential gains (even if it's just increase torque for the 2-5K RPM range) that can be had. Again, thanks for the help. Stop arguing, enjoy your Subaru!
Flex tune. Means you can put any blend to your liking of E85 or 98 ULP.
Housemusic1 wrote:Flex tune ya say? Hmmmmm, that sounds interesting.
BillyCorgi wrote:Housemusic1 wrote:Flex tune ya say? Hmmmmm, that sounds interesting.
Better than Interesting!
Swipez wrote:Housemusic1 wrote:Do you notice any real power gains with E85 on a NA engine? Obviously they gains are not like a turbo engine on E85, but I'm just wondering if the cost can be justified. Car is modestly tuned right now, will have Raptor Headers, Raptor CAI, and full exhaust in March. E85 is everywhere in my area.
I'm gonna use power @ the crank as an example of the power gains. Stock car has 180kw, if someone like Matt Mcleod gives it an E85 flex tune, he'll do a max power tune once you're at about 80% ethanol in the fuel tank. (that'll be about the max ethanol percentage you'll ever get out of the pump). And he HAS seen figures over 240kw at the crank after tuning on E85. He has achieved these figures on a few people's H6's. So yes, you can achieve HUGE power gains on N/A with an E85 tune. You'll find that the stock tune is pretty darn conservative (and lazy). Matt will tune the stock negatives out of your h6, apply his own values, and will give you much more USEABLE torque (lower rpm torque), Greater outright power, throttle response, and all those good things simply by tuning it. He then has more tuning bandwidth when E85 is introduced. The fuel has a high knock threshold and will allow matt to get even higher power and torque figures throughout the whole rpm range. (Which is what makes a fast Street car). Matt is a God on these cars, 60kw peak gains just from a tune and a different fuel is nuts. And btw, ethanol is cheaper per litre. But NOT cheaper per kilometre. It'll burn 40% faster. Hence why flex fuel tunes are so useful.
And also, don't bother changing ANYTHING other than the fuel pump, and headers. Don't bother with a CAI, do not get bigger injectors, don't waste your money on other crap. It's not needed.
alexeiwoody wrote:Swipez wrote:Housemusic1 wrote:Do you notice any real power gains with E85 on a NA engine? Obviously they gains are not like a turbo engine on E85, but I'm just wondering if the cost can be justified. Car is modestly tuned right now, will have Raptor Headers, Raptor CAI, and full exhaust in March. E85 is everywhere in my area.
I'm gonna use power @ the crank as an example of the power gains. Stock car has 180kw, if someone like Matt Mcleod gives it an E85 flex tune, he'll do a max power tune once you're at about 80% ethanol in the fuel tank. (that'll be about the max ethanol percentage you'll ever get out of the pump). And he HAS seen figures over 240kw at the crank after tuning on E85. He has achieved these figures on a few people's H6's. So yes, you can achieve HUGE power gains on N/A with an E85 tune. You'll find that the stock tune is pretty darn conservative (and lazy). Matt will tune the stock negatives out of your h6, apply his own values, and will give you much more USEABLE torque (lower rpm torque), Greater outright power, throttle response, and all those good things simply by tuning it. He then has more tuning bandwidth when E85 is introduced. The fuel has a high knock threshold and will allow matt to get even higher power and torque figures throughout the whole rpm range. (Which is what makes a fast Street car). Matt is a God on these cars, 60kw peak gains just from a tune and a different fuel is nuts. And btw, ethanol is cheaper per litre. But NOT cheaper per kilometre. It'll burn 40% faster. Hence why flex fuel tunes are so useful.
And also, don't bother changing ANYTHING other than the fuel pump, and headers. Don't bother with a CAI, do not get bigger injectors, don't waste your money on other crap. It's not needed.
Swipez...it's great that you're excited about your H6. It is a great engine and the gen4 is a fantastic platform. I don't think anyone here is trying to claim otherwise.
These numbers you're quoting so religiously about crank power and others...they're just that - "quotes". Not only are they "not quite" proven, as dynos measure power/torque at the hubs/tyres and not at the crank, but some like the "40% more fuel usage" and "300kw at the crank with a supercharger" are wrong. If you don't mind - let's stick to numbers that have been measured reliably and proven many times - 180kwatw.
That is best case scenario with all the bolt ons + full E85 (as measured on a manual, take off about 20kw for an auto) and a considerable amount of $$. Yes, it's a pretty nice daily driver.
That is also the same peak that a bone stock GT gets with a TBE and maybe an cheap TMIC. 180kw on a manual, take off 20kw for the 5eat. Add a fuel pump, headers and E85? Suddenly you're well into 200kwatw+ territory with more torque and power everywhere (except maybe under 2000rpm!) over a similarly modded H6. And it really shows up even on the bum dyno. Funny enough, Matt has quoted his customers 230kwatw on that setup. And then there was one bloke here who made 270kw at the rear (let's allow 10% extra power, so 230-240kw otherwise at all 4) on that setup. Oh and he was on 98. See how dyno figures also don't really solve anything and just create arguments?
If you guys really want to brag about how much power and torque you're making - post up some 1/4 slips. No one can argue with those (and are a lot more exciting to talk about than your crank numbers).
Check out Kiahatsiu's challenge thread. Lots of H6 owners had a go on the 1/4mile. Turns out - all of these "WRX beating" E85 H6s ran the same 1/4 as a stock WRX or worse.
TL:DR version: Enough shit talk, post up some slips.![]()
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