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Thread: 22-23 degrees and 125 shot
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05-14-2009, 05:14 PM #1
22-23 degrees and 125 shot
I want to spray a 125 wet shot. (kit sitting in garage) My timing is at 22-23 degrees WOT. I'm using a standalone with 110 I guess. my a/f ratio is 13.4/1 until 5100 then dives to about 12.8/1. This sounds like I should be able to spray a 125 shot without pulling timing. The car makes 400NA rwhp. What do you think?
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05-15-2009, 02:12 AM #2
Looks Safe !!!
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05-15-2009, 04:17 AM #3
i normally run 25* timing.
Cold Air Intake, Muffler Delete, Vinci High Performance Dual Valve Springs, Hardened Pushrods, Yella Terra 1.85 Rockers, Some Hydropdipped Stuff, Strut Tower Brace, Some SS Badges, boost/vacuum gauge, fuel pressure gauge, some checkered stripes, drilled/slotted rotors, ZL1addons Stealth wickerbill, Ruxifey LED side markers
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05-15-2009, 11:55 AM #4
- Join Date
- Mar 2009
- Location
- Shepherdsville, KY
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- 98
Onyx Black, M6- 2001 SS Convertible #4498
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05-15-2009, 12:45 PM #5
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05-15-2009, 04:30 PM #6
I don't have any knock. I will gladly take it back to the tuner though. I was planning on taking it back before actually spraying. On the other hand, I've beat the hell out of it for 3 years without a hiccup. I'm assuming the 110 or c16 in my standalone should drop the a/f ratio to an acceptable range for nitrous.
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05-18-2009, 10:38 AM #7
- Join Date
- May 2009
- Location
- chesterfield va
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- 7
blue- 1971 camaro
better to start out "fat" and work backwards toward lean, always pull timing for the bottle 2 degrees for evry 50hp check the plugs for "peppering" and it will last for many miles
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05-18-2009, 04:42 PM #8
2* per 50hp is too much retard. maybe above 200, but you can go with stock timing table on a 150 shot.
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05-18-2009, 06:12 PM #9
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05-18-2009, 06:22 PM #10
A 2002 F-body should have had a stock timing table of about 19 degrees. If you have 23 degrees in there, then I believe it's been tinkered with already.
I'm pretty sure it was the earlier years (98-00) that had a higher timing table from the factory, something like 28 degrees???
Mrr23 would know for sure.
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05-18-2009, 06:23 PM #11
depending on where you are at in your timing table, you can be 27*-28*. most stock displacement LS1 motors typically are in the .52 - .60 cylinder airmass rows. here's screenshot of as stock 2002 high octane timing table. so, just make sure your timing is in the 22*-23* range there
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05-18-2009, 06:31 PM #12
I was hoping you would post up a timing table
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05-18-2009, 06:36 PM #13
you were one minute ahead of me.
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05-18-2009, 06:37 PM #14
It's funny you mentioned the air mass rows Mrr23. My 2002 SS runs in the .72 air mass row consistently at WOT, with stock cam and all. Which is where I got the 19 degrees from,,,I had to bump that entire section up.
Yet that 2000 I picked up in your neck of the woods with that Vinci cam, and now an LS6 intake and such,,,and it only runs in the .52 airmass area at WOT. Strange to me.
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05-18-2009, 06:37 PM #15
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05-18-2009, 06:41 PM #16
airflow restrictions will dictate how much cylinder airmass will be used. example, if the 2000 still has the LS1 intake, it will pull in less air than the 2002 with the LS6 intake.
so long as you logged it and saw the timing, that's where you'll be. you'll want to check again when you do run the nitrous as it changes the cylinder airmass some. with nitrous, the motor rpms quicker and can result in higher cylinder airmass which will put you lower in the timing table.
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05-18-2009, 06:45 PM #17
Ya like Mrr23 said, it depends on what cylinder airmass row the engine is running in at WOT. You would have to log while watching the entire timing table and go on a full throttle run. Then tinker in and around that area.
If you were showing 22-23 degrees on the main screen,,,then the car was probably running in the .72 to .76 cyl airmass area at WOT....
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05-18-2009, 06:48 PM #18
Ya that's along the lines I was thinking. I recently installed an LS6 intake, and with that baby cam I would think the cylinder airmass would have at least matched or went even higher than my stock 2002.
I'm guessing it must be the difference in the cylinder heads,,,853's verses the 241's???
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05-18-2009, 06:50 PM #19
could be. the 241s are supposed to flow more than the 853s. also camshaft LSA plays a role in cylinder airmass
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