- Location
- Toronto, On
^^you can keep your stock exhaust. all i was saying is that since its kind of restrictive, with the power you will be making you might want to get an aftermarket exhaust with larger tubing so you can make more power.
About how much more power would you get with a new exhaust? I know it varies, but what's a rough guess?
It might be time to add some more power!
it's spelt "pwned" not "poned"........duh
lol
ahhh these 17 year olds..![]()
I know a few people who don't have any monitoring with single turbos, twin turbos and a couple of supercharged Z's... thousands of miles without an issue. Meanwhile, I have the supercharger on for maybe 500 miles, always paranoid of the AFR so I'd stare at the gauge, and watch what it does when I slam the gas pedal (all while waiting for a dyno tune) and I'd watch it every time dump into the 11's, creep up into the 12's, and stay there until I let go of the gas, where it'd shoot down into the 10's and then creep back up to the 14's.... I still don't know how the chewed piston happened, but I can only assume the J&S UltraSafeguard wasn't doing its job (I knew exactly how the fuel pump worked, but the J&S was magic to me, I just had Shady take a pic of his J&S and I copied his settings exactly)- ALWAYS monitor at least the AF ratio
Conservative tuning is key, monitoring is good... but if the fuel pump gives up unexpectedly while pulling, are you really going to be able to save it from the ensuing destruction by looking at that meter?
Also, sometimes the damage is done without you even knowing it, and then the real "destruction" could occur when you're just cruising...
- ALWAYS monitor at least the AF ratio
I apologize if this is a niave question, but how do you monitor AF?