Addermk2
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- Mar 7, 2006
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Paul said:I see. That's a good point - I hadn't thought about that when I was running through this in my head.
Couple things here:
1) I have to agree with modo on the bypass/BOV comment. Functionally they do the same thing. A speed density setup (i.e. one in a FAST or AEM) will not care where the vented air goes to. In a MAF setup, the situation would obviously be different.
2) I think Addermk2 raises a good question about why Ford elected to move the IAT sensor from the #5 runner on foxbody cars to the air inlet pipe before the throttle body on the 94-95 5.0s. Fundamentally, my preference would indeed be for the #5 runner, but it does beg the question... why did a room full of engineers at Ford move it to the inlet?
3) I still don't know why a 90mm LMAF will peg at such a low horsepower number. What is so different between that meter and a similarly-sized aftermarket meter that one outperforms the other to such an extent?
Paul.
Ultimately, it doesnt come down to a matter of port size. 76mm, 80mm, 90mm, 97mm.. wtf/e Its how the electronics are set and what values and resistances are carried over for the "calibration" of said piece... X voltage = Y air flow
think of it like the difference between a narrow band and wide band O2 sensor
both measure exhaust gas content. one goes from 0-1v, one goes from 0-5v... both do the same job.. they just read different