996 Turbo / GT2 Turbo discussion on previous model 2000-2005 Porsche 911 Twin Turbo and 911 GT2.

Dyno HP...

Old Jan 27, 2004 | 09:32 PM
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Dyno HP...

I'm planning on dynoing my car after the Stage 4 GTR kit is installed...
if the dyno machine is SAE... and it's RWHP that I get...
what's the estimate real HP on crank?
 
Old Jan 27, 2004 | 10:09 PM
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Most will quote a 15% drivetrain loss from crank hp to hp at the wheels. This is only an estimate. There are extensive discussions on this previously. You may want to do a search. Its imp if the dyno is two wheel or four wheel. I think 4 wheel dynos give lower numbers.
 
Old Jan 28, 2004 | 02:53 AM
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4wd's tend to lose about 25% but these are all estimates, and what's really important is the car's rwhp.
 
Old Jan 28, 2004 | 11:15 AM
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In terms of drivetrain loss, generally, 15% is used for FR (front engine rear drive) cars and 20% for AWD.

The most common way to actually measure drivetrain loss it is to use the dyno to measure it... I believe it's done while the drivetrain is coasting down, as the dyno compares it's known momentum (and/or drag, hence deriving the time it takes to coast down) against the difference when a car's drivetrain is introduced into the equation. This is an over-simplified explanation, but you get the idea... it's kind of a "reverse" dyno pull.

Then, one has to take into consideration altitude, temp, etc... for the final correction.

Stephen
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Old Jan 28, 2004 | 11:22 AM
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Originally posted by barev
4wd's tend to lose about 25% but these are all estimates, and what's really important is the car's rwhp.
While it is true that an automatic tranny 4wd truck may experience a 25% drivetrain loss, our Turbos' drivetrain are much more efficient than that. I'd imagine it's somewhere beteen 15~20%.

Stephen
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Old Jan 28, 2004 | 12:15 PM
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thanx guys ^_^
 
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