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kkosche 01-16-2013 09:20 PM

Dyno / Tuner Recommendation
 
Finalizing a purchase on a SP. Has a 460 that is stroked to 521. Running P51 heads and a CompCams solid roller (FF-4420-4132-R108). Victor 4500 /1050 Holly. Compression is 10.4:1. TKO500 and Ford IRS. Car will reside in Lake Stevens, WA.

Questions:

1. The car is coming from high altitude (5000' plus) do you have a dyno/tuner/shop that is recommend some where between Bellingham and Olympia, WA?

One recommendation I have heard of is Blood Enterprises out of Auburn, WA.

2. If I jump ring to an 8 stack EFI set up, would the tuner in question #1 be different?


Thank you!

UrQ 01-17-2013 08:43 AM

I have used Carb Connection High Performance Auto Services | Hemi - BMW - Corvette/Camaro - Car/Truck - Carburetor/Smog Repairin Kirkland, they have a Dynojet dyno (which I prefer). I have EFI so I had to do my own tune, but since you have a carb they can do the tune. So I have no immediate experience with their tuning talent. I can attest to the fact that they perform the dyno runs with the proper cautions.

Go Hard or Go Home 01-17-2013 09:43 AM

Blood is a good tuner but be prepared to give some of your own. Get an estimate.

Carb Conn also does good work.

I think there is still a dyno in Auburn at the mustang shop right off of 167 (just south of 18)

Blue Cobra 01-17-2013 10:51 AM

Talk to Scotty at RHP in Tacoma, just off 512. I tore it down and built it back up and he did the shop/tuning work on my full roller 429 Super Cobra Jet. RHP has a full machine shop on one side and dyno next door. He is master porter aka MadPorter, and tuner. Scotty will tune you Snake at the Dyno, don't forget to share the video.

Scotty had my Holley 780 dual-pumper ported and flowed, and set up with dual-stage power valves to handle going from Sea-Level to 10,000 feet with no tinkering or running rich/lean.

He really knows the Ford 385 blocks inside and out. If you want a custom cam grind he is the master! Easy to work with and honest as hell.

Here is the link to RHP:
Re in"Car"nation High Performance - Home

BC Kevin

kkosche 01-17-2013 08:20 PM

Thank you folks.

kkosche 01-18-2013 06:49 AM

One follow up question . . .

How concerned should I be about gently running the car (transport truck to garage, garage to tuner)? Say 70 miles total. Car was tuned at 5400 ft elevation. Moving down to Sea-level . . same fuel + thicker air = lean.

I am not sure how lean . . . if car say, never goes above 3K RPM on the way to the tuner . . am I at risk?

Also . . the car has a tank full of 110 octane fuel. . . why with only 10.4:1 and aluminum heads? Because the previous owner ran the fuel in everything he owned. . . to many stacks of hundred dollar bills I guess.

UrQ 01-18-2013 10:15 AM

Any way you can borrow a air/fuel ratio meter ? Or can you trailer your car to where it needs to be?

kkosche 01-19-2013 02:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by UrQ (Post 1227791)
Any way you can borrow a air/fuel ratio meter ? Or can you trailer your car to where it needs to be?

Don't have an air/fuel ratio meter . . and even if I did, I would have an easy way to test the mix through 3000 RPM under load.

I could dig up a trailer, yes . . . but a pain.

Jake 01-19-2013 12:44 PM

I would trailer it if possible. You will most likely be o.k., but do you want to take a chance burning it down? You generally are running on the idle circuit below 2500RPM so if you drive it keep it below that.

Jake

kkosche 01-20-2013 01:50 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I appreciate the advice.

I finalized the purchase yesterday. Took a day trip down to Colorado and back. Car is being loaded on the transporter today.

Attached is a picture.

I think the easiest and safest way will be to pull the front and rear bowls, take a look at what jets the car is currently tuned with . . . and then upsize both sets by two sizes (1 size for each 2,000 foot of elevation drop). Car's elevation when tuned was 4800 feet. I would think this will get it in a very safe range to then get it to a dyno and have it properly tuned.

It will need to be ran approx 2 miles from the transport drop to my garage in its current form.

Does the above approach cause any concerns?

Thanks all.

SwiftDB4 01-20-2013 02:20 PM

Sounds like you're on track. I've heard 2 fuel jet sizes up as a starting point also from CO to sea level. At least you'll be more in the ballpark for the tune.

Lebeter 01-25-2013 12:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Blue Cobra (Post 1227632)
Talk to Scotty at RHP in Tacoma, just off 512. I tore it down and built it back up and he did the shop/tuning work on my full roller 429 Super Cobra Jet. RHP has a full machine shop on one side and dyno next door. He is master porter aka MadPorter, and tuner. Scotty will tune you Snake at the Dyno, don't forget to share the video.

Scotty had my Holley 780 dual-pumper ported and flowed, and set up with dual-stage power valves to handle going from Sea-Level to 10,000 feet with no tinkering or running rich/lean.

He really knows the Ford 385 blocks inside and out. If you want a custom cam grind he is the master! Easy to work with and honest as hell.

Here is the link to RHP:
Re in"Car"nation High Performance - Home

BC Kevin

Does he have an engine dyno or a chassis dyno?

Blue Cobra 01-25-2013 02:45 PM

Scotty has a good working relationship with a dyno shop close to his that has both engine and chassis dynos, where he will go to with you and charge hourly to tune your ride with the dyno. Scotty shop mostly focuses on engine building, and top end work like ignition systems, fuel delivery/intake systems, heads, valves, springs, porting/flowing and custom cams are his sweet spot.

Hope this helps,
Kevin


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