I think you guys are getting a little pyronoidthedjjack wrote: Funny how little throttle it takes to raise temps once you install a Pyro you wonder how you drove without it...

I think you guys are getting a little pyronoidthedjjack wrote: Funny how little throttle it takes to raise temps once you install a Pyro you wonder how you drove without it...
konadog wrote:I think you guys are getting a little pyronoidthedjjack wrote: Funny how little throttle it takes to raise temps once you install a Pyro you wonder how you drove without it...(pretty proud if that one). Just drive easy and all will be well.
Good point.thedjjack wrote:
My van does not need the pyro at all...it is near impossible to push it into the danger zone...however I think some vans the fueling is not set to factory and you can melt them down...I would be interested to know how many heads fail from motors turned a little hot so to speak..
It is possible that yours is actually unusually detuned rather than the reverse. It would be interesting if those with EGT gauges were to chime in here; I find it quite easy to go over the top when pulling a decent hill at hwy speeds. What have others found?thedjjack wrote:
My van does not need the pyro at all...it is near impossible to push it into the danger zone...however I think some vans the fueling is not set to factory and you can melt them down...I would be interested to know how many heads fail from motors turned a little hot so to speak..
But it is really nice seeing how hard it is working...I find lifting off just a little makes no difference in "speed" but difference in heat...second best mod I made after raising the roof...
I know this has been debated before, but I personally doubt it makes a big difference turbo/after turbo. The rate that exhaust gas is flying through there, it's in contact with the turbo (which is already at many hundreds of degrees) at most few milliseconds. The idea that hundreds of degrees of heat are conducted away in that time doesn't make sense.yojimbo wrote:There is the question of 'as measured where?'
A minor detail, Phill.... where is your EGT sensor located?Phill wrote:..... My EGT comes with a (lack of better worked) "Itching betty" beeper when my EGTs are above 900, so I assumed that's what he was talking about, I did forget that some JDM car came with a speed reminder
Rattlenbang wrote:yojimbo wrote:There is the question of 'as measured where?'
I know this has been debated before, but I personally doubt it makes a big difference turbo/after turbo. The rate that exhaust gas is flying through there, it's in contact with the turbo (which is already at many hundreds of degrees) at most few milliseconds. The idea that hundreds of degrees of heat are conducted away in that time doesn't make sense.
That, too.yojimbo wrote:Regardless of any heat conduction that may occur, there is also the expansion of the gasses from cylinder to manifold, you will see a drop in temperature from that anyway. Its how AC works after all ;)