Hi Guys. I've got a 12 800 Pro with 900 miles. It has a 13.6:1 PA head , HPS can, Fire n Ice intake, and a Boss Noss kit. I bought a AAEN pipe and can combo for it this summer.
I'm planning on opening up the top end to check the cylinder skirts for cracking and the pistons for excessive slop before the winter. I pay close attention to the way my sleds run (oil ratio, plug colour, sound etc).
I would like to try running this pipe without a PCV as I only ride in Sicamous / Revy area and take it easy on the way up while burping the throttle. I've seen a few people comment that at elevation they found with the SLP pipe and can that the sled ran way too rich with the SLP PCV map and by the time they dialed back the amount of extra fuel in the map it was near factory fuel settings and others that pulled the PCV and felt it ran better without.
With the 13.6:1 head I always mix in a bit of race fuel to bump up my shell 91 to around 94-95 octane (half way through the season I started using torco accelerator instead of C12 due to the cost savings). If anything its been on the rich side with this octane on the non-ethanol plug.
AAEN also claims that with the pipe alone you do not need a fuel controller only when you install both there pipe and silencer. I don't think the silencer could make a huge difference in the engines fuel demand. What I would like to try is installing a KOSO air/fuel ratio gauge, running a healthy 95 octane race gas blend, and starting with the ethanol plug installed.
From the info I can find supposedly all the ethanol plug does is add 5% extra fuel through the entire map with no changes to timing. I want to run a air/fuel gauge anyway just because I like to be able to see if the engine is running rich or lean at all times instead of pulling the plugs to check, used to run egt's on all my previous carbed sleds.
I guess I'm curious to see if others on here think this is stupid to even try?
What kind of air/fuel ratios should I be hoping to see at part throttles and wide open?
Is the air/fuel gauge better than just running exhaust gas temps?
Will the air/fuel gauge give me a correct reading of the C16/NOS blend while I'm on the button also?
Is KOSO the preferred brand of AFR gauges and where should I weld the bung on the pipe?
Thanks in advance for the feedback
Chris
I'm planning on opening up the top end to check the cylinder skirts for cracking and the pistons for excessive slop before the winter. I pay close attention to the way my sleds run (oil ratio, plug colour, sound etc).
I would like to try running this pipe without a PCV as I only ride in Sicamous / Revy area and take it easy on the way up while burping the throttle. I've seen a few people comment that at elevation they found with the SLP pipe and can that the sled ran way too rich with the SLP PCV map and by the time they dialed back the amount of extra fuel in the map it was near factory fuel settings and others that pulled the PCV and felt it ran better without.
With the 13.6:1 head I always mix in a bit of race fuel to bump up my shell 91 to around 94-95 octane (half way through the season I started using torco accelerator instead of C12 due to the cost savings). If anything its been on the rich side with this octane on the non-ethanol plug.
AAEN also claims that with the pipe alone you do not need a fuel controller only when you install both there pipe and silencer. I don't think the silencer could make a huge difference in the engines fuel demand. What I would like to try is installing a KOSO air/fuel ratio gauge, running a healthy 95 octane race gas blend, and starting with the ethanol plug installed.
From the info I can find supposedly all the ethanol plug does is add 5% extra fuel through the entire map with no changes to timing. I want to run a air/fuel gauge anyway just because I like to be able to see if the engine is running rich or lean at all times instead of pulling the plugs to check, used to run egt's on all my previous carbed sleds.
I guess I'm curious to see if others on here think this is stupid to even try?
What kind of air/fuel ratios should I be hoping to see at part throttles and wide open?
Is the air/fuel gauge better than just running exhaust gas temps?
Will the air/fuel gauge give me a correct reading of the C16/NOS blend while I'm on the button also?
Is KOSO the preferred brand of AFR gauges and where should I weld the bung on the pipe?
Thanks in advance for the feedback
Chris
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