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One of the things I just noticed in the Injen instructions is that Testing on a Dyno will take 7 to 8 pulls before seeing significant horsepower gains. Maybe that is the reason why PMS wasn't seeing any improvement is that the car didn't adjust yet to the intake. Just throwing that out there.
One of the things I just noticed in the Injen instructions is that Testing on a Dyno will take 7 to 8 pulls before seeing significant horsepower gains. Maybe that is the reason why PMS wasn't seeing any improvement is that the car didn't adjust yet to the intake. Just throwing that out there.
The instructions did say that, but let me know who is going to do 7-8 pulls on the dyno for that.
The instructions did say that, but let me know who is going to do 7-8 pulls on the dyno for that.
I'm just wondering if it is better to drive the car some time so that the ecu can readjust before throwing it on the dyno. Kinda like going to the gym on the first day and weighing yourself only to see no results. Maybe it takes some use for the ECU to adjust accordingly. Everyone recommends that you reset the ECU, but I don't know how quick it 'learns'.
Yeah, I know, who is going to do that many pulls unless they own a dyno. But what I'm getting at is that it mentioned that it would take some pulls(use) to receive gains.
Why is it that all the top intake builder are taking the air from on top ,,,, K and N have been doing this for years ,,, all the top cars at the track uses them ,,,, theres no one else building them like Ingen ,,, I think that It was the style that sold everyone and once its 95 outside and theres no air coming in will see........ also ,,Now you 50 miles from home it starts raining hard and water splashes into the intake ,,,, Oh boy ,,, you better get your check book because your going to need it
Last edited by TimeMachine; Jul 8, 2008 at 09:07 PM.
I'm just wondering if it is better to drive the car some time so that the ecu can readjust before throwing it on the dyno. Kinda like going to the gym on the first day and weighing yourself only to see no results. Maybe it takes some use for the ECU to adjust accordingly. Everyone recommends that you reset the ECU, but I don't know how quick it 'learns'.
Yeah, I know, who is going to do that many pulls unless they own a dyno. But what I'm getting at is that it mentioned that it would take some pulls(use) to receive gains.
If your wondering this is what I did:
1. Installed injens
2. Drove car about 30-40 miles
4. Reset the ECU
5. Drove the car about 60 miles
6. Then dyno'd
If your wondering this is what I did:
1. Installed injens
2. Drove car about 30-40 miles
4. Reset the ECU
5. Drove the car about 60 miles
6. Then dyno'd
I would think that driving 60 miles after the reset would be enough for it to adjust to the new intake.