Let's talk limits of the stock bottom end
I wanted to open a discussion about the limits of our stock bottom ends with two things in mind:
- The first issue I would like to eliminate is, that you would have more than adequate fueling in place
- You have a strong safe tune in place
Our bottoms consist of forged rods, crank and hyper pistons which is clearly the weak point.
Has anyone pushed these cars to 600-650rwhp safely, and run this combo for a long period of time?
Lets hear your thoughts and reasoning on what you think our motors can handle
I guess there is really only one true way to find out and that will be when people start running the Weistec supercharger or perhaps the Evosport intercoolers and some big pullies/and or smaller supercharger pulley combined.
Last edited by urbamworm; Jan 29, 2012 at 02:22 PM.
Last edited by e55amgrocket; Jan 30, 2012 at 09:06 AM.
Stock Evo engine had been running 600+whp and running 9's pass. Honda S2000 had done 700+whp. Both of them are 4bangers, 2.0l engine. We have almost 3x the displacement and twice the number of slugs, so i dont see why not.
I hate to say this, but it's all in the tune mang!! Good luck pushing the limit. I'll be extremely happy to crack the 10's barrier in my shrimp boat.
Last edited by Forrest Gump 9; Jan 29, 2012 at 02:33 PM.
The what if's are endless however, so until someone really pushes one of these engines with a PROPER TUNING SOLUTION then we may never know.
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Stock Evo engine had been running 600+whp and running 9's pass. Honda S2000 had done 700+whp. Both of them are 4bangers, 2.0l engine. We have almost 3x the displacement and twice the number of slugs, so i dont see why not.
I hate to say this, but it's all in the tune mang!! Good luck pushing the limit. I'll be extremely happy to crack the 10's barrier in my shrimp boat.
im not sure actually how tunable our ecu's are but most high hp cars (evos, civic, s2000, etc etc) all have either a full standalone or an stock ecu with an advance tuning program that gives the user fully tunable fuel, ignition, timing tables and etc. we are still limited to what out tuning program allows us.
ex: Motec M84 features -
- Windows based ECU Manager tuning software with user definable screen layouts
- Individual cylinder tuning of both fuel delivery and ignition timing
- Suits modern engines, including those with coil per cylinder ignition
- Fully configurable axis points on all tables
- Highly configurable crank and cam trigger inputs to suit almost all OEM sensors and tooth patterns
- Single Wideband Lambda input (dual optional)
- Capable of advanced control functions, such as:
- Traction control
- Overrun boost enhancement (anti-lag)
- Gear change ignition cut (flat shift)
- Boost control
- NEW: Nitrous injection
- Dual stage injection (Hi/Lo injection)
- Configurable sensor inputs including custom calibrations
- Capable of receiving and transmitting data via the CAN bus
- Capable of receiving data from two Lambda measurement devices via CAN
- Integrated advanced diagnostics, including injector and crank trigger diagnostics
- Ref/Sync capture displayed on the built-in digital oscilloscope
- Internal data logging (512 kB) with fast download via CAN
- State of the art i2 Standarddata analysis software
- Now with 100 Hz max logging rate
I wanted to open a discussion about the limits of our stock bottom ends with two things in mind:
- The first issue I would like to eliminate is, that you would have more than adequate fueling in place
- You have a strong safe tune in place
Our bottoms consist of forged rods, crank and hyper pistons which is clearly the weak point.
Has anyone pushed these cars to 600-650rwhp safely, and run this combo for a long period of time?
Lets hear your thoughts and reasoning on what you think our motors can handle
Now I didn't buy the e55 to mod it, I already have 2 money pits don't need a 3rd! But I'd like to hear thoughts on what the engine is capable of as well. I don't have a reference point on the engine, so hard for me to chime in as I'm not familiar with the platform.
For example, for a 500whp tune, What AFR, at what static pressure at what RPM and boost combination is considered safe? How much additional timing is considered safe on the motor at this level of power? What about oil temp, IAT, and EGT temps? And that's just with 91/93 octane, what are your expectations with using different fuels such as e85, 104 or even c16?
Sorry I know it's a lot of questions, but you have to start I think with some sort of baseline and then from those variables perhaps project to what power level the bottom end can handle.
Now to address tuning, I have never run any of my cars on ethanol before, so I am not sure what is considered a safe a/f and timing setup, but my tuner knows what type of tunes I run, and they are not aggressive at all.
I also have a plethora of mustang tuners that have tuned 1000rwhp mustang's on the corn who will be in my corner.
What are the typical VE mods on this motor? more efficiency, less boost, less heat, less melted pistons, etc.
In a perfect world, sleeving the block and dropping in low comp billet pistons would be the order of the day.
Add a 195mm in and take the 180mm off, would put you at 600rwhp IMO. Now the question becomes, can our motors hold that, and for how long.
Given, everyone has different driving habits, and my setup is mostly going to cars shows, on the dyno or at the track.
Onething I am interested in seeing is what type of power weistec will be making on our cars. Surely they have down some research on the limits of our bottoms end, and would not out out a product that just starts popping motors all over the place. That 2.9 is going to put out a minimum of 600rwhp IMO, so only time will tell.








