they will not drop .10 to .20 off your times, i would bet that.
they will not drop .10 to .20 off your times, i would bet that.
I think it will take both the up pipes and different manifolds or headers to get benifits or any noticable gains in hp.
look im not trying to take anything away from the up pipes, i think they are great and i want some, but some say they help a lot and others dont. i know nathan said he made some and only saw a little increase in roll on spoll up, and he said rob made back to back passes with and without them and saw no gain or soomething small like a 5 psi drop in drive pressure. same et. i was just going off that. i hope when i get some that they gain me 30 hp or .1 to .2 tenths.
I guess the question to the guys that run just the up pipes is how much mph did you gain running them? That will give us a better idea of the hp.
I didn't think they'd help as much as they did either, just stating the facts from my application.
I gained .4mph on a day that is 20* warmer and with ~13 more gallons of fuel in the truck, not sure how much 13 gallons of fuel weighs or how much it would affect mph.
I didn't think they'd help as much as they did either, just stating the facts from my application.
I gained .4mph on a day that is 20* warmer and with ~13 more gallons of fuel in the truck, not sure how much 13 gallons of fuel weighs or how much it would affect mph.
91 lbs, or about +.05 on your ET.
My understanding is this: Warmer air isnt as dense as cool air...so less volume per lb of boost.
Diesel I think is 8 to 8 1/2 lbs per gallon