rebelyell22
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- Joined
- Oct 12, 2016
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- Location
- Tupelo, MS
- Vehicle(s)
- 2011 Camaro 2SS/RS
My Gen 3 10r80 with a 93 dyno tune for comparison
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Yes, 1.02 is the correction factor, which changes based on environmental factors. I'm in North Mississippi where we have very high temps and humidity.Where you read SAE 1.02 … that’s adding power to your numbers.
You would’ve dynoed 396 that day.
a stock gen 4 in 7th would be closer to 430 stock.
@rebelyell22
I kinda think of dynos as one’s own personal drag strip. As long as same strip same conditions I’m able to tell if the mod improves or reduces performance. Different dyno different parameters = different track.Comparing years old numbers on different dynos is pretty silly.
…same day and dyno.
I think the cars are over rated from the factory. I can’t believe a car in 2025 still is experiencing a 15% drivetrain loss.Assuming a 15% DT loss, that is spot on with rated non active exhaust numbers of 480hp.
I'd say the car is very green and will pick up once it's gotten some real miles on it too.
WRX doesn't have 6% drivetrain loss. It's way higher.I think the cars are over rated from the factory. I can’t believe a car in 2025 still is experiencing a 15% drivetrain loss.
I’m coming from an AWD ‘24 WRX that had a 6% drivetrain loss from the factory through AWD and multiple drive shafts.
so either my WRX had 300HP from the factory or the Mustang isn’t really 486.
I would say the dyno says otherwise. The 2024 WRX is rated at 271 HP.WRX doesn't have 6% drivetrain loss. It's way higher.
Subaru underrated the power a little bit. It's a well known fact in the WRX community. No big deal. BMW often does that with their performance cars as well. There's no way to get 5% drivetrain loss especially on an AWD vehicle.I would say the dyno says otherwise. The 2024 WRX is rated at 271 HP.
It put down 255 at the wheels when it still had temp tags on it.
That’s a 6% drivetrain loss based on what the manufacturer rates it at.
I’m not claiming that it is an actual 6% loss… I’m not sure how we would know.
My point is that I believe Ford inflates their HP numbers based on rated HP vs what the cars put down on the dyno.
That’s the game that manufacturers play.While we're at it let's go back in time to 2002, when the WRX was first released in the USA with 227hp. Those things only dynoed 175hp!
Works out to 23% drivetrain loss
different dynos, different cars, different days.... and of course picking and choosing runsI just see a lot in the low low 400’s, some even I saw were high 300’s - but that might be tuners doing funny things to show higher gains on their tunes.