J.R. said:With PI cams and a PI intake, you are stil within the stock parameter's of the ECu to be able to adjust to. Go with aftermarket "Stage II's" though, and it won't like it much at all.
jfor441 said:J.R. said:With PI cams and a PI intake, you are stil within the stock parameter's of the ECu to be able to adjust to. Go with aftermarket "Stage II's" though, and it won't like it much at all.
It is gonna be real interesting when I get my stage 3 port and polish heads and Comp XE274H cams on my car and drive to the tuner LMAO.
J.R. said:jfor441 said:J.R. said:With PI cams and a PI intake, you are stil within the stock parameter's of the ECu to be able to adjust to. Go with aftermarket "Stage II's" though, and it won't like it much at all.
It is gonna be real interesting when I get my stage 3 port and polish heads and Comp XE274H cams on my car and drive to the tuner LMAO.
If you have an Xcal, just bump the idle, otherwise keep your foot on the gas and keep the rev's up
LI98GT said:Going on a few years now with the PI cams/intake swap and haven't "needed" a tune in that time. Idles and runs strong as is with stock timing and air/fuel controled by the stock tune. Don't know what I'm missing at this point, so I can't quantify what "all of my gains" exactly is for me, but had the local mustang shop told me at the time of my last dyno that i could see 10rwhp fairly easily, but it's under the curve that really counts.
I did recently purchase a used xcal2, but haven't been able to figure out how to increase the base timing so far.
voidfinger said:that sucks... so the only way to do global timing if i'm thinking of it right is like a timeing adjuster by steeda or mac?