while thats true, it only really helps with emissions. you could dyno the same car twice, with the same tune, the only difference being running in a SFI mode, the other being MPFI, and the amount of power/torque will be exactly the same within the tolerance of how accurate the dyno is. it obviously doesn't help idle quality, i can vouch for that.
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while thats true, it only really helps with emissions
you could dyno the same car twice, with the same tune, the only difference being running in a SFI mode, the other being MPFI, and the amount of power/torque will be exactly the same within the tolerance of how accurate the dyno is.
it obviously doesn't help idle quality, i can vouch for that.I may own a GTO now, but I'm still a 60V6er at heart.
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yeah I thought it reverted to MPFI above a certain RPM too. It would make sense that the valves opening so fast that the higher the RPM the less it would matter.
Someone should dyno their car then disconnect the cam sensor so it goes to batch fire mode and see what happens. Hmm I might try that on my car just for the hell of it and see if I can't get the MPFI rumble at idle they have... LOL
But for idle quality and part throttle cruising at low RPMs power I have to agree SFI will win there.sigpic New 2010 project (click image)
1994 3100 BERETTA. 200,000+ miles
16.0 1/4 mile when stock. Now ???
Original L82 Longblock with LA1, LX9, LX5 parts
Manifold-back 2.5" SS Mandrel Exhaust. Hardware is SS too.
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i wonder if disconnecting the cam sensor does anything other than reverting to MPFI? possibly the PCM adds more fuel, takes out timing to "compensate"?
but i have no problems with idle quality, then again, i don't have 4 valves per cylinder, so i wouldn't be penalized so much at low RPMs for airflow/turbulence
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AFAIK, OBD-II stays in SFI mode throughout the rev band. I can't think of any other exsplanation where with OBD-I my car had a blip of reduced power between 5-6K, and with OBD-II I now have a surge of power between 5-6K. 5-7K is now the strongest part of my rev band where before my power was almost gone over 6K.I may own a GTO now, but I'm still a 60V6er at heart.
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All SFI systems revert to MPFI after about 2500 RPM, or so I have been lead to understand by folks alot smarter than me.
The computer simply can't keep up with individual cylinders after that, so it's really not an issue.
As far as which system is best that may be a personal preference, but OBD-1 is probably the easiest and least expensive to tune.Last edited by asylummotorsports; 05-27-2009, 11:11 AM.
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Originally posted by asylummotorsports View PostAll SFI systems revert to MPFI after about 2500 RPM, or so I have been lead to understand by folks alot smarter than me.
The computer simply can't keep up with individual cylinders after that, so it's really not an issue.
As far as which system is best that may be a personal preference, but OBD-1 is probably the easiest and least expensive to tune.
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Or is it we are getting confused with the 24x crank sensor? That it's not read above 2500 RPM? Or is it both?sigpic New 2010 project (click image)
1994 3100 BERETTA. 200,000+ miles
16.0 1/4 mile when stock. Now ???
Original L82 Longblock with LA1, LX9, LX5 parts
Manifold-back 2.5" SS Mandrel Exhaust. Hardware is SS too.
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