im not saying that its the hot air causing the issue, but if it was not compensated for in the tune, and the timing was advanced in higher RPMs disregarding the hot air (which is possible, because from what i recall, this car wasnt dynoed or datalogged), then the combination of the 2 can cause the pcm to pull a lot of timing when the hot air is introduced causing this thing to fall on its face.
does that make sense? It sounds plausible to me. Either way, once this thing is on a dyno, even if it is a mechanical failure, it'll show it's face in the datalog (i.e. timing cliff diving in reaction to something else or leaning out caused by a weak pump or whatever).
does that make sense? It sounds plausible to me. Either way, once this thing is on a dyno, even if it is a mechanical failure, it'll show it's face in the datalog (i.e. timing cliff diving in reaction to something else or leaning out caused by a weak pump or whatever).
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