Tips for preventing engine destruction
Success lies in the details, if you have a well thought out setup things will normally last. Mine has been over 600hp its entire boosted life(1 full year at 630hp and the next full year at 730hp). Absolutely nothing wrong with it to this day and going for more next year.
This yrs setup (403" Lsx with a 98mm, straight methanol) it is currently only at 12 psi, but 27* and 3.6 AFR and could use some more timing at that. I'm thinking we may drop it back to 26 above 20psi of boost. So you can see how just fuel type can totally change a setup/tune.
I made over 600hp on my 2.0 at 34lbs of boost. Ran 5* at peak torque and ramped up to 13* by redline. Others made more than me on pump gas using 0* at peak torque and 9* out the top. But again apples to oranges there.
no way to compare the two...
also, double the Ci, does not equate to double the power...it just doesnt work that way
also, head/chamber/valve design has a lot to do with timing...
LS heads are Very efficient.....so it needs way less timing
that 4cylinder engine is not very effiicient in comparison....and it wont build as much heat or as much cylinder pressure as an engine with twice the power...
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also, double the Ci, does not equate to double the power...it just doesnt work that way
also, head/chamber/valve design has a lot to do with timing...
LS heads are Very efficient.....so it needs way less timing
that 4cylinder engine is not very effiicient in comparison....and it wont build as much heat or as much cylinder pressure as an engine with twice the power...
Don't install a boost controller the night before tuning so that you can get tuned for MOAR power. It doesn't leave you enough time for testing to make sure you have everything hooked up correctly before putting it in the tuners hands.

USE GOOD FUEL! and set your goals in steps.
My combo is a fairly radical solid roller 408 with an F2 procharger on c16 fuel and water 2 air intercooled.
I first started running the thing around 15-17 lbs of boost and 16* of timing. Getting it sorted out, I worked my way up to 21* of timing and that is where it ran the best numbers. Never tried any more than that.
Later I started running about 25 lbs of boost and started timing back at 15*. It was a total turd and the plugs where showing no heat. So I started moving timing up 1 degree at a time and it kept picking up mph. It was lifting the heads pretty bad once I got to around 21* again, but that is where it was running the best numbers on the track. I ended up tearing the motor down after the pass in the video below, but it would not surprise me at all if it kept picking up with more timing. I could never get a decent amount of heat on the plug.
I'm posting this because as others have said, and I agree, the best way to tune is by reading the plugs. I've just got a weird situation here where the cylinder heads wouldn't stay down before I was able to find a max power tune according to the plugs. Weird to me but whatever..........4-bolts around the cylinder suck.......but the ford guys seem to have it under control.
If I remember right this vid was around 24-26 lbs of boost and 21* of timing. We put the go pro under the hood cause we couldn't figure out where the little droplet of water under the hood where coming from. The water would be almost completely evaporated by the time we got it back to the pit spot so we had no idea it was doing like this. My jaw hit the floor when we watched the vid back at the trailer.
My combo is a fairly radical solid roller 408 with an F2 procharger on c16 fuel and water 2 air intercooled.
I first started running the thing around 15-17 lbs of boost and 16* of timing. Getting it sorted out, I worked my way up to 21* of timing and that is where it ran the best numbers. Never tried any more than that.
Later I started running about 25 lbs of boost and started timing back at 15*. It was a total turd and the plugs where showing no heat. So I started moving timing up 1 degree at a time and it kept picking up mph. It was lifting the heads pretty bad once I got to around 21* again, but that is where it was running the best numbers on the track. I ended up tearing the motor down after the pass in the video below, but it would not surprise me at all if it kept picking up with more timing. I could never get a decent amount of heat on the plug.
I'm posting this because as others have said, and I agree, the best way to tune is by reading the plugs. I've just got a weird situation here where the cylinder heads wouldn't stay down before I was able to find a max power tune according to the plugs. Weird to me but whatever..........4-bolts around the cylinder suck.......but the ford guys seem to have it under control.
If I remember right this vid was around 24-26 lbs of boost and 21* of timing. We put the go pro under the hood cause we couldn't figure out where the little droplet of water under the hood where coming from. The water would be almost completely evaporated by the time we got it back to the pit spot so we had no idea it was doing like this. My jaw hit the floor when we watched the vid back at the trailer.
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